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2009 | 2 | 2 | 115-120

Article title

"Golden" Customers and "Bronze" Citizens in CEE Countries

Title variants

Languages of publication

EN

Abstracts

EN
During the Soviet era, the word "citizen" was strongly connected to the existing state-controlled communist party system. "Citizenship" symbolized the ideal Soviet citizen with loyalty, duty and self-sacrifice to the existing order. The new word "customer" appeared together with democratization, freedom and market. Being customer was the realization of both democracy and the capitalist ideology. Customership emerged as a concept distinct from citizenship, and it helped to fill the ideological vacuum in CEE countries. The centrality of consumerism and abandoned citizenship are aspects that might characterize the transformed former Soviet Union and Eastern Europe more than one might expect.

Keywords

Publisher

Year

Volume

2

Issue

2

Pages

115-120

Physical description

Dates

published
2009-12-01
online
2010-01-14

Contributors

  • Department of Public Administration, University of Tartu, Tartu, Estonia

References

  • Bouckaert, G., J. Nemec, V. Nakrošis, G. Hajnal and Tõnnisson, K. (eds). 2008. Public Management Reforms in Central and Eastern Europe. Bratislava: NISPAcee Press.
  • Drechsler, W. 2005. "The Re-Emergence of ‘Weberian’ Public Administration after the Fall of New Public Management: The Central and Eastern European Perspective." Halduskultuur 6, 94-108.
  • European Union (EU). 2005. Europe for Citizens Programme, 2007-2013. Available online at:
  • Lauristin, M. 1997. "Context of Transition." In M. Lauristin and P. Vihalemm (eds). Return to the Western World. Tartu: Tartu University Press, 25-40.
  • Patico, J. and M.L. Caldwell 2002. "Consumers Exiting Socialism: Ethnographic Perspective on Daily Life in Post-Communist Europe." Ethnos 67 (3), 285-294.
  • Piattoeva, N. 2009. "Citizenship and Nationality in Changing Europe: A Comparative Study of the Aims of Citizenship Education in Russian and Finnish National Education Policy Texts." Journal of Curriculum Studies 41 (6), 723-744.[Crossref][WoS]
  • Sahadeo, J. 2007. "Druzhba Narodov or Second-Class Citizenship? Soviet Asian Migrants in a Post-Colonial World." Central Asian Survey 26 (4), 559-579.
  • Verdery, K. 2000. "Privatization as Transforming Persons." In S. Antohi and V. Tismaneanu (eds). Between Past and Future: The Revolutions of 1989 and Their Aftermath. Budapest: Central European University Press, 175-197.

Document Type

Publication order reference

Identifiers

YADDA identifier

bwmeta1.element.doi-10_2478_v10110-009-0004-y
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