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20 - Economic change and the national question in twentieth–century USSR/Russia: the enterprise level

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  01 September 2009

Alice Teichova
Affiliation:
University of East Anglia
Herbert Matis
Affiliation:
Wirtschaftsuniversitat Wien, Austria
Jaroslav Pátek
Affiliation:
Charles University, Prague
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Summary

The break-up of the USSR brought to a close the history of the state which had been the largest multinational entity in Europe over the preceding three centuries. For a long time to come, historians will probably go on discussing the role the national factor proper had to play in this, the greatest cataclysm of the late twentieth century – notably, the extent to which the peoples within the Soviet Union yearned for independence. After all, in the referendum held democratically some six months before the demise of the USSR, a majority of the population of the country as a whole and of each of the subsequently independent states (apart from the Baltic countries) came out in favour of retaining the Union. However that may be, the ultimate results of the break-up indisputably had a national hue: in place of the polyethnic superpower there emerged some fifteen states organised, in most cases, on the monoethnic principle.

The break-up of the USSR came as a terrible upheaval for the economy of all the successor countries. Nor is it only a matter of the actual consequences of the destruction of the single state, but also of the kind of state that went to pieces in this case.

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Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Print publication year: 2000

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