87,307 results on '"*COMMUNISM"'
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2. The United States Enters the Korean Conflict. Teaching with Documents.
- Author
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National Archives and Records Administration, Washington, DC.
- Abstract
After World War II the United States centered its foreign policy on the containment of communism, at home and abroad. Although it was aimed primarily at containing the spread of communism in Europe, the policy also extended to Asia. Asia proved to be the site of the first major battle waged in the name of containment: the Korean War. Dividing Korea in half came about at the end of World War II. In an effort to avoid a long-term decision regarding Korea's future, the United States and the Soviet Union agreed to divide Korea temporarily along the 28th parallel, a latitudinal line that bisected the country. War between North and South Korea broke out along the 38th parallel on June 25, 1950. The U.S. decision to intervene in Korea grew out of the tense atmosphere that characterized Cold War politics. This lesson plan provides an historical background of the conflict; reproduces President Harry Truman's statement ordering troops to Korea; identifies the National History Standards and National Civics and Government Standards correlations; and presents seven activities for analyzing the document. Also contains a written document analysis worksheet. (BT)
- Published
- 2002
3. Education for Better Governance: A Look at the Ongoing Cadre Political Education in China.
- Author
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Hua, Shucheng
- Abstract
The evolution of cadre (political elite and bureaucratic functionaries) education in China from 1949 to the present was evaluated in terms of leadership development and the underlying interests of the Chinese Communist Party as it integrates more fully into the world economy. Historic achievements include: (1) increased knowledge about market economies; (2) increased use of management theory and practice; and (3) improved work performance efficiency. In 1998, to correct ongoing cadre problems (such as corruption, favoritism, and lack of civic responsibility) and to improve the governance capacity of cadres (to create greater social stability), the federal government initiated Three-Emphasis Education (emphasizing theory, study, political awareness, and work ethics improvement), an integral part of which was interviews with 1500 cadres. Findings included the following: (1) the hierarchical nature of the program prevented rapid improvements and public access to program evaluation; (2) poor systemization into cadre's daily work caused corruption to resurface once education was complete; and (3) the lack of an educational objective to change the Chinese bureaucracy (the current objective was to change individuals only). Inclusion of the public in the process of cadre political education is recommended in order to strengthen educational outcomes. (The bibliography lists seven references). (AJ)
- Published
- 2002
4. The Social and Economic Collapse of Polish Communism: Life in Gierek's Poland. Fulbright-Hayes Summer Seminars Abroad Program, 2002 (Hungary and Poland).
- Author
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Derda, Regina
- Abstract
The issues that ignited the Solidarity movement in August 1980 had been fermenting for years during the Edward Gierek regime (1970-1980). This curriculum project presents students with an experiential exercise to provoke thinking about the economic shortcomings of the communist countries of the former Soviet bloc. The project also presents the issue of the heavy censorship of Polish media to disguise the government's shortcomings. It asks students to use statistical information to describe the living conditions for most Polish people during the 1970s. The project is divided into four sections: (1) "Experiential Exercise: The Unraveling of the Soviet-Style Economy"; (2) "Media Censorship"; (3) "Researching Life in Poland in the 1970s Using Microsoft (MS) Encarta"; and (4)"Bibliography." (Contains 14 references.) (BT)
- Published
- 2002
5. The Languages of Indigenous Peoples in Chukotka and the Media.
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Diatchkova, Galina
- Abstract
In the first half of the 20th century, the social functions of the indigenous languages in Chukotka, in northeast Asia, increased due to the development of written languages, local press, and broadcasting on radio and television. From 1933 to 1989, the local press of indigenous peoples in Chukotka was used for Communist Party propaganda. However, it also improved the indigenous peoples' lives and the development of educational institutions. The local press in Chukotka, published only in the Chukchi language until 1989, was an important forum for maintaining the social functions of indigenous languages. In the 1950s, language assimilation increased because of the language policy and influence of the Russian majority. Indigenous children had to attend boarding schools and were educated in the Russian language. Now the oral traditions are being lost because indigenous families speak mostly Russian and because Native languages are losing their function as transmitters of indigenous culture. The recognition of that loss by indigenous people caused them to found local cultural societies whose aim was to preserve indigenous languages. In the early 1990s, the Murgin Nutenut newspaper was published in three indigenous languages and Russian by a group of Native journalists and writers whose goal was saving their traditional culture and language. Now the paper is a supplement to a Russian newspaper and publishes material in two indigenous languages twice a month. (TD)
- Published
- 2002
6. Constructing a Post-Communist Identity in English: 'A Small Lane between Optimism and Pessimism.'
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Biava, Christina
- Abstract
This paper explores the concept of post-Communist identity, particularly in the countries that make up what was formerly referred to as the Eastern Bloc. It examines previous work in the field about the development of minority identity through language and provides a historical background about Eastern Europe and Hungary. It describes some of the options for identity formation in post-Communist Eastern Europe and illustrates these options using examples from Hungarian college students' writings and class discussions (the return to nationalism, the realignment with the West, and becoming citizens of the global village). The paper suggests using the notion of minority identity to view a post-Communist society. It concludes that Hungarians are very aware of their need to construct new identities vis-a-vis their relationships to their own history, to both the east and the west, and to the global village. They are also aware of the role that language (both their own language and foreign languages such as English) plays in that identity construction. (SM)
- Published
- 2001
7. An Analysis of Meanings Related to the 1987 Campaign against Bourgeois Liberalization in China.
- Author
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Schnell, Jim
- Abstract
The study of communication phenomena in China by a foreigner poses unique challenges. It requires not only understanding the particular phenomenon under analysis but also the cultural context within which the phenomenon exists. This paper focuses on meanings conveyed in 1987 that were related to the government campaign against bourgeois liberalization in China. Noting that this requires Western appreciation of bourgeois liberalization within the Chinese cultural context and the year 1987 as a particular point in post-Mao China, the paper first presents a brief orientation as helpful context regarding cultural and chronological developments. The author has visited China 10 times and in April 1987 was teaching at Northern Jiaotong University in Beijing, where he surveyed the opinions of a class of graduate students about the development and meaning of bourgeois liberalization. The paper reviews the literature produced by and about the Chinese government and also uses student opinions as manifested in the survey. It suggests that this subject is significant for speech communication scholars, as the term "bourgeois liberalization" exemplifies language which is created to be purposely vague. The expression was created by the Chinese government to describe unwanted ideas and values identified as American or Western. (Contains 27 references.) (NKA)
- Published
- 2001
8. Libraries and Lenin.
- Author
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Lynn, Karen
- Abstract
This instructional unit combines a study of the Soviet leader V. I. Lenin with a study of libraries. Lenin was selected as the focus because of his support of books and libraries and because he oversaw a revolution that altered the political and social structure of Russia and the balance of power throughout the world. Included are lesson plan activities and examples, as well as a review of "Libraries in the USSR." This review helps the social studies instructor prepare a course of study about Lenin. The unit is intended for use with secondary students and needs three or more class periods to complete. The goal of the curriculum unit is that students studying Lenin will identify the need to support and use libraries. (BT)
- Published
- 2001
9. Telegram from Senator Joseph McCarthy to President Harry S. Truman. The Constitution Community: Postwar United States (1945 to Early 1970s).
- Author
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National Archives and Records Administration, Washington, DC. and Gray, Tom
- Abstract
As soon as World War II ended, the United States and the Soviet Union began a struggle for supremacy. It was against the backdrop of the Cold War that the threat of internal subversion and external attack began to preoccupy Congress. On February 9, 1950, Senator Joseph McCarthy gave a speech in Wheeling, West Virginia, where he claimed to have in his possession information proving that more than 200 employees in the State Department were Communist Party members. This began a campaign during which McCarthy continued to make accusations about communist activity within the executive branch. His 1954 probe of the U.S. Army, televised nationally, led to his downfall. The featured primary source document, a telegram from Senator McCarthy to President Truman, was sent to the President on February 11, 1950. This lesson also includes Truman's reply (probably not sent). The lesson relates to the interaction between the executive and legislative branches dealing with the nation's security and acts that may be determined to be treason (Article III, Section 3, Paragraph 1). It correlates to the National History Standards and to the National Standards for Civics and Government. The lesson provides historical background (four resources); and suggests diverse teaching activities for classroom implementation, including document analysis, research and class discussion, compare and contrast, and extension activities. (BT)
- Published
- 2000
10. Reconsidering Arthur Bestor: A Postmortem for the Cold War in Education?
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Weltman, Burton
- Abstract
This essay traces the liberal to conservative changes in U.S. political attitudes and the effect these changes had on progressive and essentialist theories of education from the 1940s to the present. Focus is on the role Arthur Bestor played in these developments. Bestor was a leader of the anti-progressive movement during the 1950s and the most widely read educational reformer of that time. Initially the main difference between Bestor and his opponents was the relative place he gave to social problems and the liberal disciplines, but he grew increasingly conservative in his vision of educational reform, promoted essentialism in education, and called for a national commitment to liberal education. Bestor's educational background, ideologies, theories of curriculum, and opponents are discussed. Debates regarding teaching mainstream culture versus cultural pluralism, issues which divided Bestor and his progressive opponents during the 1950s, continue to divide liberal educators today. The document argues that because the Cold War is over and the political crisis that inflamed educational differences between progressives and essentialists is gone, it is time for progressive educators to acknowledge the value of Bestor's ideas and bring the educational Cold War to an end. Contains 153 references. (MM)
- Published
- 1999
11. Communism and Containment. Grade 10 Lesson. Schools of California Online Resources for Education (SCORE): Connecting California's Classrooms to the World.
- Author
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San Bernardino County Superintendent of Schools, CA. and Durbin, Dennis
- Abstract
This lesson plan sets up a scenario that involves lost, declassified military documents concerning a program begun in 1945 that placed 1,000 men and women in stasis (they were called "sleepers") deep within mine shafts in the mountains of Utah. The program was to provide, in the event of an overthrow of the U.S. government, a means to re-establish the U.S. government and way of life. Student teams must provide a brief but complete history, emphasizing the Truman Doctrine, of the past 50 years for the forgotten, and now-awakened, "sleepers." Students are provided with background information, detailed instructions, online resources, a Web site evaluation form, and reflection questions. The teacher's notes describe the unit's purpose, explain the unit's correlation to history/social science standards, suggest day-by-day teaching strategies, and address adaptations for special needs students. (BT)
- Published
- 1999
12. McCarthyism Revisited: Popular Press and Public Memory.
- Author
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Townsend, Rebecca M.
- Abstract
National periodicals constructed their retellings of McCarthyism in problematic ways. They failed to remember the numerous actors who contributed to McCarthyism, and instead focused on Senator Joseph McCarthy as someone who took the necessary anti-Communism to an extreme. Periodicals held realist world views and clamored for objectivity in retelling the story of McCarthyism. This metonymical public memory supported a passive "tolerance" for McCarthyism. This memory is problematic, for it is a creative forgetting of the aspects of history which did not mesh with the orthodox view of the past. (Contains 71 notes and 73 references.) (Author)
- Published
- 1998
13. Hungary and Poland: The Transformation from a Command to a Market Economy, 1989-1998. Fulbright-Hays Summer Seminars Abroad Program, 1998 (Hungary/Poland).
- Author
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Levine, Michael
- Abstract
This paper examines the economic changes that have taken place in recent years in two central European countries, Hungary and Poland. Findings in the paper are based on materials gathered during the summer of 1998 on a Fulbright-Hays seminar visit to Hungary and Poland and from talks with officials and professors in those countries. Observations in the paper present a general view of what has transpired in the last 10 years of economic change and development in Hungary and Poland; concluding that, although both countries will struggle with social problems into the 21st century, as long as they continue to move toward a privatized market economy and work toward economic and social reforms they will integrate successfully into the European Community. (Contains 33 notes and extensive charts.) (BT)
- Published
- 1998
14. The Trial of J.V. Stalin: Exercises in Critical and Moral Reasoning. Critical Geopedagogy No.1.
- Author
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Thomas, Paul F.
- Abstract
The dissemination and synthesis of critical, but scattered, existing knowledge concerning the human costs of J.V. Stalin's once-acclaimed achievements are contained in this seed document. The document is primarily for teachers who are free to expand, contract, modify, or delete the seed suggestions provided according to the characteristics of their students and teaching situations. The package contains 10 representative activity modules about Stalin that may require anywhere from 1 to 4 class periods. The package's modules can be used in any order and as supplementary teaching materials that will enrich topics and exercise students' critical thinking skills. The first component of each activity module lists a number of critical and/or moral thinking issues for the teacher's pedagogical consideration. The package also contains 20 reference sheets that complement the activity modules and provide databases for the lines of inquiry suggested in the modules. The document concludes with an extensive bibliography. (BT)
- Published
- 1998
15. China: Tradition and Transformation, Curriculum Projects. Fulbright Hays Summer Seminars Abroad 1998 (China).
- Author
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National Committee on United States-China Relations, New York, NY.
- Abstract
The curriculum projects in this collection focus on diverse aspects of China, the most populous nation on the planet. The 16 projects in the collection are: (1) "Proposed Secondary Education Asian Social Studies Course with an Emphasis on China" (Jose Manuel Alvarino); (2) "Education in China: Tradition and Transition" (Sue Babcock); (3) "Chinese Art & Architecture" (Sharon Beachum); (4) "In Pursuit of the Color Green: Chinese Women Artists in Transition" (Jeanne Brubaker); (5) "A Host of Ghosts: Dealing with the Dead in Chinese Culture" (Clifton D. Bryant); (6) "Comparative Economic Systems: China and Japan" (Arifeen M. Daneshyar); (7) "Chinese, Japanese, and American Perspectives as Reflected in Standard High School Texts" (Paul Dickler); (8) "Gender Issues in Transitional China" (Jana Eaton); (9) "A Walking Tour of Stone Village: Capitalism with Chinese Characteristics" (Ted Erskin); (10) "The Changing Role of Women in Chinese Society" (John Hackenburg); (11) "Healing Practices: Writing Chinese Culture(s) on the Body: Confirming Identity, Creating Identity" (Sondra Leftoff); (12) "Unit on Modern China" (Thomas J. MacDonough); (13) "Chinese Women in Transition" (Sally McWilliams); (14) "Minorities, Regional Diversity and National Identity among the Contemporary Chinese" (W. Lawrence Neuman); (15) "China in 1998" (David Philips); and (16) "Traditional Chinese Architecture" (Ted Sawruk). (BT)
- Published
- 1998
16. McCarthyism's Rhetorical Norms.
- Author
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Townsend, Rebecca M.
- Abstract
Rhetorical norms of early McCarthyist discourse reveal a reliance upon images of chaos and the body. Through such metaphors, rhetors crafted a model of discussion that feminized "democracy" and "tolerance" to support anti-Communist measures and de-legitimize their opponents. Political variety was coded as deviant to national identity. "Tolerance" became a warrant for the argument to contain political freedom. The paper's examination of congressional deliberations of contempt of Congress citations, the Subversive Activities Control Act, and Senator McCarthy's own rhetoric shows the development of the rhetorical norms of McCarthyism. (Includes 84 notes; contains 45 works cited.) (Author/NKA)
- Published
- 1997
17. Civic Education in the Czech Republic: Curriculum Reform for Democratic Citizenship. ERIC Digest.
- Author
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ERIC Clearinghouse for Social Studies/Social Science Education, Bloomington, IN. and Hamot, Gregory E.
- Abstract
Many cooperative civic education projects among U.S. and Central/Eastern European educators have emerged since the end of Communist Party Rule in the former Czechoslovakia. This digest describes a collaborative curriculum development project, Civic Education for the Czech Republic (CECR). The objective of CECR is to revise the existing social studies curricular framework for the third form of secondary schools (ages 17 and 18) by taking particular aim at the overarching objectives for civic education reform started in 1989. The project seeks to develop sample lessons and a teacher's manual that realize this objective and to present suggestions for additional teaching methods. Other CECR components included: (1) an intensive Curriculum Development Workshop held at the University of Iowa and attended by Czech teachers and pedagogical faculty, U.S. curriculum development and civic education specialists, and Iowa secondary social studies teachers; (2) an international Partnership Program; and (3) an evaluation of the final product by Czech and U.S. experts in civic education and curriculum design. (CB)
- Published
- 1997
18. Teaching about Democratic Constitutionalism. ERIC Digest.
- Author
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ERIC Clearinghouse for Social Studies/Social Science Education, Bloomington, IN. and Patrick, John J.
- Abstract
There are more than 100 democracies in the world today. All but three of them--Great Britain, Israel, and New Zealand --have written constitutions. This digest examines the importance of constitutions and constitutionalism and the teaching of these concepts through the use of comparisons. The primary objectives of civic education for democratic citizenship are to acquire knowledge of constitutionalism; to use this knowledge to think and act effectively about issues of governance; and to become committed to the maintenance and improvement of constitutionalism within one's polity. In order to compare written constitutions and constitutionalism in different countries, common attributes are reviewed. Six possible attributes are: (1) the structure of government; (2) the distribution of powers among executive, legislative, and judicial branches; (3) the limitations on powers of the branches of government; (4) the guarantees of human rights; (5) the procedures for electing, appointing, and replacing government officials; and (6) the methods of constitutional amendment or change. (CB)
- Published
- 1997
19. Russian Youth in the Transition Period toward the Free Market Economy--1990-1993.
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Dmitriyev, Gregory
- Abstract
This paper examines the changes in aspirations and mentality of young people in Russia as to their expectations of what the market system can bring into their life. The study was done in Moscow and in Khabarovsk (Far East). Surveys of 11th-graders were conducted to gain their perspectives about the term "market" and what the future holds for them in the time of change. The paper presents the historic overview of the fall of Communism and the ideological, psychological, and social changes that also occurred. Although most Russians noted the difficulty of the changing times, they responded that the free market as they experienced it was an improvement and looked forward to better days. (Contains 26 references.) (EH)
- Published
- 1997
20. Global Trends in Civic Education for Democracy. ERIC Digest.
- Author
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ERIC Clearinghouse for Social Studies/Social Science Education, Bloomington, IN. and Patrick, John J.
- Abstract
During the 1990s, there has been an unprecedented global dissemination of information about the theory and practice of democracy and civic education for democracy. This digest identifies nine trends having broad potential for influencing civic education in the constitutional democracies of the world: (1) conceptualization of civic education in terms of three interrelated components (civic knowledge, skills, and virtues); (2) systematic teaching of core concepts; (3) analysis of case studies; (4) development of decision-making skills; (5) comparative and international analysis of government and citizenship; (6) development of participatory skills and civic virtues through cooperative learning activities; (7) use of literature to teach civic virtues; (8) active learning of civic knowledge, skills, and virtues; (9) conjoining of content and process in teaching and learning of civic knowledge, skills, and virtues. (CB)
- Published
- 1997
21. Economies in Transition: Command to Market. Teacher Resource Manual. EconomicsAmerica.
- Author
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National Council on Economic Education, New York, NY., Anderson, Curt, Dick, Robert, Prager, Jeffrey, Stivers, Nolan, Ware, Judith, Burke, Francis, Keay, Thomas, Rothweiler, Deborah, Tepe, Henry, Suiter, Mary, and McCorkle, Sarapage
- Abstract
The materials in this publication were developed by nine high school teachers from St. Louis, Missouri, and a U.S. economic educator after they attended a program in Kharkiv, Ukraine, to learn about the difficulties of economic transition in that country. This book is designed to provide lessons about basic economic reform issues facing the countries in the former Soviet Union and eastern Europe. Each of the 10 lessons focuses on a specific aspect of economic reform and the challenges that have been encountered. The 10 lessons in this packet include: (1) "A Parking Lot Full of Incentives"; (2) "Who Decides?"; (3) "A Tale of Two Countries"; (4) "Klips and Kupons"; (5) "Economic Transition: The Role of the State"; (6) "All for One, One for All: - Well Maybe: Problems Within a Tightly Controlled Industrial Structure"; (7) "The Money Maze"; (8) "Public to Private"; (9) "Worker Woes: Labor Transition Challenges"; and (10) "Market or Command: Which Is Best for the Environment?" (EH)
- Published
- 1997
22. International Partnerships for Civic Education and Democracy.
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Adjunct ERIC Clearinghouse for International Civic Education, Bloomington, IN., ERIC Clearinghouse for Social Studies/Social Science Education, Bloomington, IN., Indiana Council for the Social Studies, Bloomington., Patrick, John J., and Weakland, John E.
- Abstract
This theme issue of "The International Journal of Social Education" contains 11 articles all concerned with efforts to promote civic education in post-communist countries, particularly former Soviet-Bloc nations, including Latvia, Poland, Hungary, the Czech Republic, and Russia. Described are international partnerships for civic education and democratic citizenship that have developed. One prominent example is Civitas: An International Civic Education Exchange Program, which is funded by the Office of Educational Research and Improvement of the United States Department of Education. Among the major articles are: (1) "Civic Education and the Advancement of Democracy in Latvia" (John J. Patrick; Valts Sarma); (2) "Civitas: An International Civic Education Exchange Program" (Charles N. Quigley; John N. Hoar); (3) "Education for Democratic Citizenship in Poland" (Richard C. Remy; Jacek Strzemieczny); (4) "Implementing New Civic Education Programs in Indiana and Post-Communist Countries" (Robert S. Leming; Thomas S. Vontz). This collection of articles expresses a global mission, shared by the U.S. contributors with their partners abroad, to act together to spread commonly desired blessings of liberty as extensively as possible among the diverse peoples of the world. (RJC)
- Published
- 1997
23. Culture and the Kindergarten Curriculum in Poland.
- Author
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Putkiewicz, Elzbieta
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This paper describes the effect of cultural context on the content of kindergarten curriculum in Poland, chronicling the historical changes from Communist to post-Soviet, capitalist cultures. Soviet cultural influence on early childhood education from 1945 to 1989 is described as affecting a single obligatory curriculum, strict government control, limited parental involvement, direct instruction, nationalist activities, and ideological indoctrination. The paper notes that the developing pluralism of the 1970s and 1980s did not affect the uniform state cultural policy in the schools because of strict tutorial control, limited parental involvement, and a parental belief in the survival of Polish family values--which was encouraged by the Church. The paper presents changes in the educational curriculum in kindergartens in the 1990s, including policy documents that became invalid and changes in minimum standards for education. The general assumptions and program content, including physical education, child/family/environment relations, and cognitive and creative development, of these new education standards are outlined. Changes are reported in classroom instruction, particularly greater communication between teacher and students, more small group and individual work, and less formal discipline. Also noted are the increasing role of religion in the schools, greater parental participation, and new civic schools, including Jewish schools. Finally, the paper briefly describes a study of teacher attitudes, revealing a mixture of hope and anxiety, and mixed feelings about the loss of state control, greater teacher autonomy, and parental participation. (Two hundred and nine teachers participated. (JPB)
- Published
- 1996
24. Civic Education Reform in the Context of Transition.
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Kalous, Jaroslav
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Defining civic education reform in the Czech Republic since 1989 in terms of its post-communist transition, this paper contends that the breadth, depth, and range of educational reforms proposed or already adopted in Central and Eastern European societies is extensive, involving most areas of education (curricula, educational legislation, management, new types of school and university institutions, and the system's overall structure, administration, and financing). The document includes explanations of Czech Republic education reforms from political, historical, and sociological perspectives: "Character of Our Educational Reform"; "'Anomie' and 'Crisis'"; "The Heritage of the Communist Regime"; "The Role of Pre-war Models and Traditions"; "The Influences of Political Doctrines";"The Legislative Framework"; "The Role of Public Opinion and the Media"; "General Principles and Main Problems of Curriculum Reform"; and "Conclusions." After a seven-year transitional process that has opened up the education system to local and individual initiatives with relatively minor State involvement, the next phase of reform in the Czech Republic (and Central and Eastern Europe) requires collaborative discussions on the goals of education and curriculum content. (CB)
- Published
- 1996
25. Writing Rhetorical Histories of Modern Revolutions: Rhetoric and Political Change in Poland, 1952-1992.
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Ornatowski, Cezar M.
- Abstract
In the last 6 years, following the collapse of the Soviet Union, the countries of Central and Eastern Europe have been undergoing fundamental political reinvention. Scholars of language, literacy, and rhetoric can learn much from the study of rhetorical histories. Accordingly, a brief rhetorical history of these upheavals, particularly those in Poland, reveals the extent to which they are very much about the language of politics and public debate. According to literary professor Michal Glowinski, the major characteristic of Communist rhetoric in Poland was the dominance of simple, direct evaluation over sense. Such evaluations were always based on clear oppositions and polarizations: us vs. them, friend vs. foe, good vs. bad. It was thus a language that was already overinterpreted; each work, each expression, had one meaning and one meaning only. Because of this semantic reduction it did not tolerate synonyms or alternative ways of expression. Another major characteristic of this language was its strong "magical" quality: its orientation not towards describing reality but towards bringing it about. Desirable states were talked about as though they already existed. In the 1980s, public frustration and demands for real dialogue and meaningful reforms, coupled with a deteriorating economy, led to an acute rhetorical crisis. Ironically, Solidarity entered the elections with a program whose articulation painfully resembled, in spite of the differences in substance, the traditional rhetoric of propaganda. One problem continuing to face Poland is the persistence of the polarizing, valuative rhetoric, which originated in totalitarian discourse. (TB)
- Published
- 1995
26. Democratization of Eastern Europe: Hungary and Poland in Transition.
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Center for International Education (ED), Washington, DC. and Hallamore, Nancy A.
- Abstract
Since the end of the Cold War, those teaching about developing democracies in Central and Eastern Europe have taken on new responsibilities: dispelling cultural attitudes formed and taught during the Cold War, helping students to understand the concept of democracy, and analyzing the effects of these events on the world. This high school lesson plan begins by briefly describing the changes in Eastern and Central Europe during 1989 that led to the collapse of communism there. Students analyze the transition of Hungary and Poland to democracies by examining case studies of each country, answering series of questions about specific areas, and then presenting a plan for restructuring the countries. The lesson encourages students to become aware of the changes in Central and Eastern Europe, improve their communication skills, and develop cooperation, teamwork, and decision-making abilities. A fact sheet for each country details demographics, cultural attitudes and beliefs. The fact sheets also list each country's problems in the following areas: education, employment, housing, commerce, pollution, economic goals, political structure, foreign policy, and cultural clashes (alcoholism, drugs, minority rights/ethnic groups, xenophobia). A "Lesson Debrief" helps students summarize what they have learned. Before beginning this lesson, students should know about the Cold War and the Soviet bloc and understand democracy, communism, and free markets. The document includes a 17-item annotated resource list, a 1994 map of Central and Eastern Europe, and maps of Hungary and Poland. (LAP)
- Published
- 1995
27. Stalin's Crimes Revealed, 1936 and 1956. Educator's Guide. Live from the Past Series.
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New York Times Co., NY. and Patrick, John J.
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This guide provides an overview of the rise to power of Joseph Stalin and the legacy of Communist rule in the Soviet Union. The guide provides a listing of key events, a background essay, a list of components related to articles from "The New York Times" of the era, suggested activities, discussion questions, a list of key players related to the event, vocabulary terms, and suggested readings for further study. (EH)
- Published
- 1995
28. Functional Literacy in Romania: Between Myth & Reality. Chapter 13.
- Author
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Anghel, Florentina
- Abstract
This chapter reviews the history of literacy training in Romania through the pretotalitarian period (1890-1945), the totalitarian period (1945-1989), and the posttotalitarian period (1989-present). Current literacy development efforts face many challenges including the facts that 592 classrooms do not have indoor plumbing, that more than 1,700 teaching positions in village and commune schools are held by individuals without specialized education, and that 60 percent of functional illiterates live in rural areas. An evaluation of rural literacy training shows that, during the most difficult stage of totalitarianism (1980-1989), great strides were made, including establishing a school in every village, free education for all, access to cultural activities and written information, original cultural productions, and mass cultural demonstrations. However, the dictatorship controlled the content of written and visual communication, practiced censorship, and imposed codes of the Ruling Power through propaganda that became known as "gobbledygook." Objectives for a posttotalitarian rural literacy training program include abandoning the idea that only schools can provide literacy training; discovering community-based methods and encouraging nongovernmental agencies to launch literacy projects; producing tools to raise awareness of functional illiteracy in Romania; making use of projects and programs established by other agencies for the education of women and youth and for training; and enlarging the field of literacy training to include cultural minorities. Projects in progress include developing a rural university, a wide scale evaluation of the human and material resources in rural areas, and the establishment of a national network of facilitators for rural areas. (LP)
- Published
- 1994
29. Post-War-History and Unification of Europe in Textbooks. The Romanian Experience.
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Capita, Laura
- Abstract
This document surveys the changes in the content of history textbooks in Romania from the end of World War II to 1991. Post war Romanian education is examined through the education laws of 1948, 1958, and 1975, and at the syllabi and textbooks used. The textbooks are relevant for such an analysis because they represent the main material support of didactic information. The study examined 15 editions of middle and high school texts published from 1957 to 1991. History teaching followed the same stages as the entire social and political life of the country. The specifics of history teaching depended on the degree of implication of the political factor in the elaboration of objectives, adequate content for attaining the objectives, and the methodological framework. The first stage of the post war education system in Romania began with the Education Law of 1948 through which Stalinist viewpoints on society and history emerged. By the mid 1960s Romanian history texts no longer placed the Soviet Union in a key role. During this period topics after World War II were grouped as: (1) the capitalist states; (2) "popular democracies," the socialist or communist countries; (3) national liberation movements in colonial countries; (4) the international communist and working class movement; and (5) science and culture. The 1991 textbooks reflect the elimination of value judgments from the titles, groupings of problems facing human society as a whole, and the growing recognition of the importance of individuals. (DK)
- Published
- 1992
30. Chinese Education for the 21st Century Conference Proceedings (Honolulu, Hawaii, November 19-22, 1991).
- Author
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Virginia Univ., Charlottesville. School of Education. and Hackett, Peter
- Abstract
This document contains the proceedings of a conference on the future of Chinese education. The papers are grouped into four sections: (1) school, culture, and society; (2) teaching and learning; (3) educational reforms; and (4) John Dewey and Chinese education. The conference was designed to provide researchers, practitioners, and policy-makers with a forum to discuss various theoretical and practical issues. The conference focused on four themes: (1) basic and rural education; (2) literacy; (3) cultural education; and (4) learning experiences in formal, informal, and non-formal settings. Potential topics for future investigations are suggested in the 25 articles that are presented in entirety, and in abstracts of 25 other articles. Articles dealing with school, culture, and society include: (1) "International Exchange: Some Reflections on China and the West" (Ruth Hayhoe); (2) "China's Academic Relations with Canada: Past, Present, and Future" (Martin Singer); (3) "The Educational Role of Chinese Almanacs: Past, Present, and Future" (Richard J. Smith); (4) "Adopt a China Rural School/Community Library" (Dun-zhi Liu; Lungching Chiao); (5) "Reading Ability and Disability among Chinese Beginning Readers: Implications for Educators" (Ji-Mei Chang; Ovid J. L. Tzeng); and (6) "Technological Literacy for Chinese Youth" (James J. Kirkwood). The section on teaching and learning has 10 articles on subjects such as English language education and moral education. The section on reform contains seven articles. The section on John Dewey contains two articles. Appendices include working group reports, the remaining abstracts, and a conference program. (DK)
- Published
- 1992
31. History of Higher Education, 1992.
- Author
-
Pennsylvania State Univ., University Park.
- Abstract
This annual compilation offers six articles on the history of higher education. In the first article, "The Historical Matrix of American Higher Education," Roger L. Geiger provides an overview of the history of American higher education. Following it, E. D. Duryea, Jurgen Herbst, and W. Bruce Leslie comment on his hypothesis which identifies eight "generations" in higher education from 1637 to World War II. The next paper is by Geraldine Joncich Clifford and is titled "No Shade in the Golden State: School and University in Nineteenth-Century California." It analyzes the complex relationship between the University of California and its environment, including demographic, economic, and political forces. In "Conflict and Community in Soviet Institutes of Higher Education, 1921-1928," Peter Konecny examines the relationship between the communist party, state educational apparatus, and local leaders of higher education in Leningrad during the years of the New Economic Policy. Next, Jurgen Herbst in "Translatio Studii: The Transfer of Learning from the Old World to the New" looks at the history of higher education in North America, prior to the American Revolution. Carol Everly Floyd, in "Centralization and Decentralization of State Decision Making for Public Universities, Illinois 1960-1990," considers the forces that dictated the complex "balance of power" and "system of systems" approaches to the governance of public higher education in Illinois. The last article, "The Not-So-Old-Time College" by Roger L. Williams, is a review essay discussing two books--"Wesleyan University, 1831-1910" by David Potts and "Gentlemen and Scholars" by W. Bruce Leslie. (Individual papers contain references.) (DB)
- Published
- 1992
32. Beyond Linguistic Policy: The Soviet Union Versus Estonia.
- Author
-
Roskilde Univ. Center (Denmark). and Rannut, Mart
- Abstract
Discussion of the role of non-Russian languages in the Soviet Union (USSR) focuses on the history of ethnic group languages and language policy in Estonia since the collapse of totalitarianism. A historical overview of Soviet Union language policy is offered, with attention given to the ideological goals influencing policy, and their realization and results. Three periods are discerned: the first characterized by urgent and violent measures used to implement Communist ideals, including elimination of whole ethnic groups; the second emphasizing homogenization and elimination of ethnic markers; and the third occurring with the introduction of "perestrojka," when ethnic and linguistic self-determination continued to be denied despite official change in policy. Three simultaneous processes are noted: increasing economic malfunction; the attempt by indigenous nations to establish political sovereignty or gain additional rights; and the attempt of indigenous nations to protect their languages and cultures. The three processes are seen as generating a crisis in the Soviet Union. Estonian linguistic policy adopted soon after the Soviet occupation in 1940 until the present is analyzed, including language attitudes among non-Estonians and language policy in education. Democracy and self-determination are seen as necessary for the solution of linguistic problems. A 20-item bibliography is included. (MSE)
- Published
- 1991
33. Early Childhood Education in China: Political Implications.
- Author
-
Chiaromonte, Tom
- Abstract
This paper reviews the history of early childhood education in China between 1949 and 1990. After the Communist revolution in 1949, China's educational policy was modeled after the Soviet Union's. Preschool pedagogy emphasized conditioning children's behavior and providing a comfortable environment for children. The number of nurseries and kindergartens grew steadily in the late 1950s. After the Cultural Revolution in 1966, the emphasis in early childhood education changed from providing a comfortable environment to carrying out proletarian politics, and many preschools were closed. The administration of preschools was taken from trained professionals and given to ideologically correct committees. School activities, such as songs and stories, centered around revolutionary ideology. The purpose of preschools was to provide protective care and develop children who would continue the revolution. After the arrest of the Gang of Four in 1976, many preschools were reopened. China then turned to the United States and Japan for its early childhood education models. Practices common before the Cultural Revolution were restored. Needs currently faced by preschools are those of increasing children's science learning and correcting personality traits of single children which the government considers undesirable. A reference list of 15 items is provided. (BC)
- Published
- 1990
34. Perestroyka in the Soviet Union. Occasional Paper No. 128.
- Author
-
Ohio State Univ., Columbus. Center on Education and Training for Employment. and Makhmoutov, Mirza Ismail
- Abstract
This document presents the point of view that although socialism has produced benefits for the USSR, Soviet society has undertaken its own radical reconstruction. History shows that the natural basis of changes in every society tends to be objective technological revolutions. The first technological revolution was agrarian. The second was industrial. The third revolution, the scientific and technological revolution, took place mostly in highly developed capitalist countries. The first aspect of perestroika in Soviet society is dissatisfaction with the state's power and a striving to adopt democratic governing. The second aspect of perestroika is the economy and financing. Economic reconstruction is complicated by the monopoly of central ministries, strict centralization in national economy management and its branches, lack of production material and equipment for free trading at the market, and a financial system in disarray caused by the partial transition to market relations and cooperatives. Reconstruction of the ideology in the Communist Party is also hinted at. The main trends of reforms in education are decentralization of management and differentiation of education. New concepts in vocational training include new curricula and programs and differentiation of subjects regarding professions. One way to reconstruct vocational training is by "de-ideologization" of education, democratic reform, and priority in financing. (YLB)
- Published
- 1990
35. Czechoslovakia. A Selection of Teaching Materials.
- Author
-
Freedom House, Inc., New York, NY., Educational Excellence Network, Washington, DC., and American Federation of Teachers, Washington, DC.
- Abstract
This document is a collection of supplemental classroom materials on Czechoslovakia to be photocopies for use in secondary schools in conjunction with the Education for Democracy Project. After decades of Soviet domination and communist dictatorship, Eastern European countries are demanding democracy, human rights, and an end to the Soviet Union's military presence. The democratic revolution in Eastern Europe can serve to help students gain a greater appreciation of and interest in the subject of history, and attain a deeper understanding of the ideas and principles of democracy. This collection of materials offers an historical framework for considering current events, but is focused on the events, ideas, issues, and personalities that have propelled Czechoslovakia's successful democracy movement. A timeline, maps and a college of historic headlines are included to give a basic historical context. A vocabulary for junior high classes or classes with little or no previous exposure to international studies, editorial cartoons, and a resource guide are also included. An update of the timeline contains two entries from 1990 and two from 1991. Sections include: (1) The Establishment of the Communist State; (2) Reform and Reaction; (3) Voices, which is a collection of excerpts from creative writings by various novelists and playwrights; (4) Documents of Dissent; (5) On Change, which is "comprised a various newspaper articles; and (6) a biography of Vaclav Havel. (Author/DK)
- Published
- 1990
36. China's Student Protest 1989.
- Author
-
Parker, Franklin and Parker, Betty
- Abstract
The Chinese university students who protested in Spring 1989 were concerned about inflation, shortages of goods and services, and pay inequities. They disliked corruption, bribery, and unfair favoritism, and wanted more press freedom and more independence for their student organizations. Most of all, they wanted more dialogue with aging leaders about their role in China's future. Low-paid or jobless city dwellers felt a common cause with protesting students. Farmers, who were far removed, adopted a wait-and-see attitude toward student protests. The leadership was split. Deng Xiaoping, outraged by the protests and alarmed that further unrest would wreck economic advances, wanted student protests crushed. Moderates, preferring reconciliation with students, were headed by Zhao Ziyang, who counseled against violent suppression. On May 17, Deng won the Politburo Standing Committee vote for military suppression, and the students were bloodily evicted from the square on June 4. Fall 1989 university enrollments nationwide were cut 5 percent. All students had to attend political re-education classes. Faculty at Beijing University and elsewhere had to attend Communist political study sessions. The clash and the military put-down discredited the Party in student minds and hearts. The hopes that impelled intellectuals to support Communism were shattered. The urban population at least is disillusioned. Farmers, slower to change, will likely side ultimately with urban intellectuals moving toward democracy. (JB)
- Published
- 1990
37. The Specter of Salem in American Culture.
- Author
-
Adams, Gretchen A.
- Abstract
Focuses on the impact of the Salem (Massachusetts) witchcraft trials on U.S. society over the centuries, particularly in relation to the trials as a metaphor for persecution and witch-hunting. Explores different events in history, such as the anti-communism evident in the 1950's and abolitionism during the U.S. Civil War. (CMK)
- Published
- 2003
38. The Rise of Conservatism since World War II.
- Author
-
Carter, Dan T.
- Abstract
Discusses the rise of the conservatism movement in the United States since World War II. States that laissez-faire capitalism and the rise of communism contributed to the popularity of conservatism in the United States. Focuses on the role of U.S. Presidents, such as Richard Nixon and Ronald Reagan. (CMK)
- Published
- 2003
39. Women, Domesticity, and Postwar Conservatism.
- Author
-
Nickerson, Michelle
- Abstract
Explores the role of U.S. women, in particular "house-wife activists," during post-World War II conservatism. Focuses on women living in Los Angeles (California) and the suburbs surrounding the city. Addresses topics, such as women's groups and patriotic bookstores operated by women. (CMK)
- Published
- 2003
40. Hollywood 'Takes' on Domestic Subversion: The Role of Women in Cold War America.
- Author
-
Straughn, Victoria
- Abstract
Discusses the role Hollywood and films had in defining the image of women in post-World War II in the United States. Focuses on the film, "Mildred Pierce," and offers a discussion of the content of this film. Includes a film based lesson plan and three accompanying handouts. (CMK)
- Published
- 2003
41. Transitional Media Vs. Normative Theories: Schramm, Altschull, and China.
- Author
-
Huang, Chengju
- Abstract
Discusses how Wilbur Schramm's "Soviet" communist model and J. Herbert Altschull's "Marxist" approach have been widely used as general theoretical frameworks to examine press systems in the Marxist world in general and China in particular. Argues that neither of the two models is sufficient in conceptualizing the Chinese case because of Chinese news media's transitional nature and the two models' inner theoretical flaws as normative press theories. (SG)
- Published
- 2003
42. Transformation of Universities in the Czech Republic: Experiences of the University of West Bohemia in Pilsen.
- Author
-
Rosenberg, Josef
- Abstract
Explores how universities in the former socialist block are responding to new challenges, using the development plan of the University of West Bohemia in Pilsen as an example. (EV)
- Published
- 2002
43. Reform of Education in Romania in the 1990s: A Retrospective.
- Author
-
Marga, Andrei
- Abstract
A Romanian academic and politician reflects on the 3 years he served as Minister of National Education. He was mandated to undertake a massive and comprehensive reform of the Romanian education system, with the aim of removing the last vestiges of its communist heritage and adapting it to European Union norms. (EV)
- Published
- 2002
44. Growing Worker Activism Pushes Envelope in China: Worker Protests Spread, Despite Repression and 'Official Unions.'
- Author
-
Senser, Robert A.
- Abstract
Asserts that China's rulers are trying to have a free labor market without the freedom, and that the Chinese labor union is actually a branch of the Communist Party. The result is worker exploitation and a burst of worker protests (despite the threat of jail). Describes efforts by Chinese activists to mobilize and empower workers and document China's labor abuses. (SM)
- Published
- 2002
45. Creating Political Space To Defend Chinese Workers.
- Author
-
Dongfang, Han
- Abstract
Presents comments spoken at a human rights conference by Han Dongfang, a Chinese activist who was jailed after an attempt to organize China's first independent union from a tent in Tiananmen Square during the democracy movement. Today, he is barred from the mainland but works from Hong Kong through Radio Free Asia. Comments focus on foreign investment, corporate codes of conduct, growing labor activism, lawsuits, and China's official union. (SM)
- Published
- 2002
46. Preferences for Inequality: East vs. West. Innocenti Working Papers.
- Author
-
United Nations Children's Fund, Florence (Italy). Innocenti Research Centre. and Suhrcke, Marc
- Abstract
Do preferences for income inequality differ systematically between the post-socialist countries of central and eastern Europe and the western established market economies? Analyzing 1999 data from a large international survey to address this question, the paper examines whether attitudes to inequality differ between east and west even after the conventional determinants of attitudes are controlled. Results suggest that this is the case. A decade after the breakdown of communism, people in transition countries are significantly more egalitarian than those living in the west, in the sense that they are less willing to tolerate existing income inequalities, even after the actual level of income inequality and other determinants of attitudes are taken into account. Results do not seem to be driven by a recent change in attitudes due to a rapid rise in inequality during transition but appear to constitute an attitudinal legacy carried over from socialism. This has important implications for the political support of reform policy, particularly for the political feasibility of future welfare state reforms in these countries. (Contains 32 notes, 30 references, and 7 tables. Additional tables are appended.) (BT)
- Published
- 2001
47. Communist Party Membership and Regime Dynamics in China.
- Author
-
Bian, Yanjie, Shu, Xiaoling, and Logan, John R.
- Abstract
Chinese survey data indicates that Communist party membership in all post-1949 periods was predicted by measures of political screening and was positively associated with mobility into positions of political and managerial authority. Education predicted Communist party membership after 1978, suggesting that China has shifted to recruiting among the educated to create a technocratic elite. (Contains 67 references.) (Author/SV)
- Published
- 2001
48. Little Mosie from the Margaree: A Biography of Moses Michael Coady.
- Author
-
Welton, Michael R. and Welton, Michael R.
- Abstract
This book examines the life of the Reverend Moses Michael Coady (1890-1959), a Roman Catholic priest who led the Antigonish Movement. During the Antigonish Movement, residents of the small maritime town of Antigonish, Nova Scotia, worked to achieve a nonviolent alternative to communism and fascism and to effect the social and economic transformation of their community through the formation of cooperatives, study clubs, and other forms of communal working and learning. The biography is based almost exclusively on original, primary documents, including materials from newspapers, obscure magazines, and a column called "The Anvil," which Reverend Coady wrote for a newspaper called the "Bulletin" (later called "The Maritime Co-operator"). The chapter titles are as follows: (1) "A New and Disturbing Presence"; (2) "On the Side of the Impossible"; (3) "Fields of Lost Opportunity"; (4) "Mobilizing the People for Enlightenment (1930-1935)"; (5) In the Eye of the World (1935-1939)"; (6) "Conceptual Architectonics"; (7) "The World Might Break Your Heart (1939-1945)"; (8) "Living in Dangerous Times (1945-1952)"; (9) "Land of Moab (1952-1959)"; and (10) "Dreaming Beyond the Mountain." A total of 458 endnotes are included. (MN)
- Published
- 2001
49. Charting Russia's Future in the Post-Soviet Era. Teacher's Resource Book [and Student Guidebook]. Public Policy Debate in the Classroom: Choices for the 21st Century Education Project. 7th Edition.
- Author
-
Brown Univ., Providence, RI. Thomas J. Watson, Jr. Inst. for International Studies.
- Abstract
This teacher resource text and student text are part of a continuing series on current and historical international issues, placing special emphasis on the importance of educating students in their participatory role as citizens. It examines the debate on Russia's identity from a Russian perspective in the areas of economic development, political organization, and foreign policy. At the core of the unit are three distinct directions, or Futures, for Russia in the coming years. Each Future is grounded in a clearly defined philosophy about Russia's place in the world and offers broad guidelines on fundamental public policy issues in Russia. The background reading prepares students to assess Russia's policy choices. Part 1 surveys key periods of change in Russian history, ranging from the reign of Peter the Great to the Mikhail Gorbachev era. Part 2 reviews the momentous changes that have taken place in Russia since the collapse of the Soviet Union, focusing in particular on new political thinking, economic reform, and Russia's evolving international relations. Includes five- and three-day lesson plans. (BB)
- Published
- 2000
50. Market, State, or Don't Know? Education, Economic Ideology, and Voting in Contemporary Russia.
- Author
-
Gerber, Theodore
- Abstract
Among 2,321 Russian adults surveyed, about half supported market institutions and about a third supported state-based economic institutions. Higher educational level was associated with proreform attitudes. Economic ideology strongly affected voting behavior, party choice, income, Communist party membership, and prodemocracy views, and also mediated the effect of education on voting and party choice. (Contains 83 references.) (Author/SV)
- Published
- 2000
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