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European spirit, adaption to market economy and national identity in Poland and Ukraine
National culture and its influence on the European Integration, advertising and entrepreneurship
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- European spirit, adaption to market economy and national identity in Poland and Ukraine
- Acknowledgement:
- Abstract
- Résumé
- Kurzzusammenfassung
- Streszczenie
- Table of content
- Registry of tables
- Index of figures
- List of abbreviations:
- Introduction
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1
The role of Poland and Ukraine in the Council for Mutual Economic Aid(CMEA) and their position during its breakdown
- + 1.1 Introduction to manifold transition CEEC matters: definitions, stage models, end point oftransition
- 1.2 Economic and general conditions in late communist Poland and Ukraine, activity of protest movements in the pre-transition period
- 1.3 The rapid breakdown of a decade-long morbid economic system – Soviet trade shock of 1989 - 91
- 1.4 Link between economic growth and uneven initial conditions among CEEC
- 1.5 Gradualism versus Big Bang
- + 1.6 General socio-economic facts of Pl and Uk today compared to 1990/91
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2
Theoretical contemplations of the NC notion: literature review, discussion
- 2.1 A glimpse on cultural definitions as embrace of NC and NI
- 2.2 The notion of nation as theoretical agars for the subsequent NI discussion
- + 2.3 Immersion in the realm of national culture by theoretical ancillary constructions
- + 2.4 Comments on selected definitions and models of national culture definitions
- + 3 Integration of NC traits extracted from selected models
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4 Main features of Polish and Ukrainian national identity, its occurrence nowadays, bi-national comparison and role in the countries` process of European harmonisation
- 4.1 Principal human questions vested in the notion of national identity, cohesion to thedomain of national culture
- 4.2 Generation and evolution of Polish national identity through its millenarian history
- + 4.3 Facets of disturbances overcome by Polish collective consciousness under communism
- 4.4 Material and mental novelties flooding the pool of Polish self- and foreign concept and public`s general and microculture-dependent reply thereon
- 4.5 Poles` self-comprehension as EU member state and harsh realities ordinary citizens and their representatives during accession negotiations
- 4.6 Repercussions of western winds of adversity on the 2003 adhesion referendum, satisfaction with the events of May 1st, 2004
- 4.7 Conclusive remarks on Poland's NI-dyed convergence process in the field of tension of popular patrimony, party initiatives, religion, social cleavages and foreign influences
- 4.8 Sketch of generation and formation of Ukraine's national identity with focus on the turbulence spilling over in the 19th and 20 century
- 4.9 Disorientations, uncertainties and new alignment after the marginalisation of Marxist doctrines in 1991
- 4.10 A threefold set of examples provided to outline Ukrainians´ deal with the subject of EU engagement
- 4.11 Negotiations of candidacy between Kiev and Brussels – a long decade of unilateral advancements
- 4.12 Comparison of nature and effect of NI in Poland and Ukraine
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5 Theoretical précis of the Basic Human Need subject, draft of respective consumers` need topology based upon of suitable advertising cases
- 5.1 Elusive touch of the cause-effect problem between BHN and NC
- 5.2 Definitions of human needs
- + 5.3 Human needs models composed by basic and progressive aspirative level
- + 5.4 Additional contributions, behavioural extension of the BHN concept
- 5.5 Criticism of ordinal and enumerative BHN approaches, question of universality resp.cultural embrace à la Marker
- + 5.6 Interpretation of style and message in advertising and the mass clientèle's reaction thereon for selected durable and non-durable consumer goods in respect of basic human needs
- 5.7 Quintessence of dominating BHN in Polish and Ukrainian advertising paysage after the turnaround of 1991
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6 Polish and Ukrainian national values and their traceability incustoms of business ownership and the complexion of Small- and Medium-sized Enterprises
- 6.1 Elucidation of motives to tie the BV/NV domain to the field of entrepreneurship
- + 6.2 Definitions and classifications of SME and entrepreneurship, semantic connection and functions for economy
- + 6.3 Empirical analyses and theoretical reasonings concerning motivations to open up a business
- 6.4 Sketch of private businessmen's situation and their competitive mentality under communist centralized economy, repercussions to business venture in CEE along the transition phases
- + 6.5 Establishing the theoretical linkage between the notion of entrepreneurship and human values
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6.6 Collection of characteristics of entrepreneurs and their actions, attempt to interpret these particularities with the toolbox of Dyczewski`s Polish national value listing
- 6.6.1 Introductive key data on the situation of private business in the pre- and early post transitionperiod
- 6.6.2 Changes of the legal framework envisaging to create a more entrepreneurship-friendly climate
- 6.6.3 Family, kin and friends as microcultures Polish private enterprises` lifecycle is commonly incorporated to
- 6.6.4 Darnell`s idea of the Christian entrepreneur transferred to a brief reasoning on religion as determinant for startups in Poland
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6.7 Reflections on the dependence of Ukrainian entrepreneurship particularities on Ray`s selection of traditional and communism-related national values
- 6.7.1 Covered in the deepest shadow of the Kremlin towers: Circumstances of non-state-owned establishments in the former Ukrainian SSR
- 6.7.2 Basic facts on the Ukrainian micro-enterprise sector, evolution manifestations between 1991and 2004
- 6.7.3 Assessment whether the worldview of life`s dirty rules is still effective within modern Ukrainian business owners
- 6.7.4 Creativity and skill of independent thinking, neglected by state order under communism, reassessed under the light of patent application activity in recent years
- 6.7.5 Paragraph explaining why the author dared to omitt the treatment of Orthodox faith in Ukraine connected to entrepreneurship characteristics
- 6.8 Verification of hypothesis 4 and brief comparison of interdependences between national values and entrepreneurship in Poland and Ukraine
- Conclusion
- Annex
- List of paper and report references
- Directory of book-based sources
- Registry of online sources
When at the turn of the 1980, the face of the political world was largely remodelled with the vanishment of classical East and West blocs, the economical wasteland created by the failed socialist planned economic system constituted a fascinating research pasture for economists of all disciplines – especially macroeconomists and specialists for economic politics. At universities, new faculties for transformation studies were created. Authors like Rodrick elucidated the reasons for the acute period of the COMECON alliance in form of teh Soviet trade shock, de Melo, van den Mortel a.o. discussed reasons for discrepancy of initial condions, Aghion & Blanchard about the speed of transition, just like Wyplosz, Fischer & Sahayestablished a balance sheet after a decade of transition. However, the preponderant part authorship dedicated to the fate and future of Central and Eastern European countries left apart a force of influence which disciplines of business adminitration have discovered for disciplines like management and staff motivation: culture. The author of the present study did extended research for working papers a.o. which may provide hints for characteristics of development visible in two exemplaric states, out of which one used to be part fo the soviet Union (Ukraine), the other a satellite „brother country“ (POland), which lie below the surface of economic behaviour and performance. The result of this quest was y and large that there indeed do exist works which deal with the selected econo-political aspects; however, most authors refer to the five dimensions of national culture presented by Hofstede, which in the authors opinion oversimplify the complex and difficultly obervable domain fo culture, sometimes even is entangled in contradictions like with the high masculinity/femininity index for Italy. This is why the author rather oriented by the need-belief-value-attitude continuum described by Culatta and thus developped his chapters on EU accession, advertisng creation and response as well as push and pull factors for business ownership and SME landscape departing from an own digest of cultural models by Trompenaars, Hall, Merk, throsby et. al., proceeding via approaches showing ellements of the N-B-V-A vchain more detailedly - e.g. Schwartzs ten basic human values or Nussbaums capability theory- and applying those components to concrete manifestaions in the oberved countries, e.g. Dyczewski´s compilation of Polish national values and Rays Ukrainian static and dynamic worldviews. Results of this study are in short that an economys national culture should not be left apart when it is about economic and political development and that for two of the three topics treated - national and European identity as well as entrepreneurship - huge diversions between Poland and Ukraine were stated (strong idea of Polishdom and Polands reserved place in the EU vs. Ukrainian roots blurred a.o. by Russian, German and Communist influences; optimist Polish business owners, often supported by their faith in God vs. resignated entrepreneurs stuck in dirty business rules in Ukraine) whereas the assessment of advertising found about the same level of human needs suppressed before 1991 and satisfied afterwards. Apart of its function as graduation, this works reason for existence is to animate fellow-researchers to undertake primary research based on more inspiring and substantial theoretical beckgrounf than the Hofstedian model and to consider other facets of CEEC integration into the EU, e.g. microcultures like religion, residence status or communicative topics like negotiation style and reasons for failure.
Book Details
Authors
Series
Diplomica
Categories
Business & Economics > General
Publishers
Publication year : 2008
License: All rights reserved ©
Times read: 42

