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  • The paper explores representations of economic reform in Czechoslovakia immediately before and after the fall of the centrally planned economy in 1989/90. By what means was the concept of rapid economic transition towards a liberal market setting mediated into the academic and the public sphere? How did it achieve wide public consent? In the first part, the paper analyzes the Czechoslovak academic discussion about perestroika in the late 1980s, where a rapid liberal transition was cast by a distinct group of younger scholars as the only possible way of reforming the socialist economy. Their training was based above all on Paul A. Samuelson’s canonical textbook Economics, which presented this discipline almost as a natural science with universal standards. Immediately after 1989/90, when some of these scholars assumed executive positions within the new Czechoslovak government, what were at first purely economic ways of reasoning merged with certain images of the national past, creating a mixture of liberal economic knowledge and national exceptionalism. (xsd:string)
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  • 2015 (xsd:gyear)
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  • 2015 (xsd:gyear)
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  • 10.14765/zzf.dok-1426 ()
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  • en (xsd:string)
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  • 1612-6041 ()
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  • 3 (xsd:string)
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  • Making Standards Work: Semantics of Economic Reform in Czechoslovakia, 1985-1992 (xsd:string)
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  • Zeitschriftenartikel (xsd:string)
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  • GESIS-SSOAR (xsd:string)
  • In: Zeithistorische Forschungen / Studies in Contemporary History, 12, 2015, 3, 427-447 (xsd:string)
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  • 12 (xsd:string)