Captured Societies in Southeast Europe

Eric Gordy, Alena Ledeneva, Predrag Cveticanin (eds)
Title
Captured Societies in Southeast Europe
Subtitle
Networks of Trust and Control
ISBN
9789633866443
Format
eBook PDF (Adobe DRM)
Language
English
Publication date
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Also available as
Hardback - € 129,00
Table of Contents
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Foreword: The INFORM project and informality (Predrag Cvetičanin, Eric Gordy)

Part I: The framework (Eric Gordy, Alena Ledeneva, Predrag Cvetičanin)

Chapter 1. What is old, what is new and what is hybrid

Chapter 2. What Europe did not know that it was doing (Ivan Damjanovski)

Part II: Informality in action

Chapter 3. Captured states and/or captured societies (Predrag Cvetičanin)

Chapter 4. Economies of favours: the good, the bad and the ugly (Adnan Efendić)

Chapter 5. Informality in everyday life: encompassing reform meets weak administration and unmet needs (Eric Gordy)

Chapter 6. Two things that informality is good at (Adnan Efendić, Alena Ledeneva)

Part III: Что делать? 

Chapter 7. Informality as corruption (Alena Ledeneva, Adnan Efendić)

Chapter 8. Informality as problem solving: formalise and indigenise (Predrag Cvetičanin, Ivan Damjanovski)

Chapter 9. The context of European integration (Ivan Damjanovski)

Captured Societies in Southeast Europe

Networks of Trust and Control

In Southeast Europe there is a big disjunction between formal procedures and informal practices—and this gap is growing. When formal institutions fail, informal practices can solve problems. These practices can be viewed critically, as a space for favoritism and corruption, or favorably, as a space of creative problem-solving. In any case, informal practices consolidate the hold of unaccountable actors on power.
This book presents findings from a collaborative and multidisciplinary research project. During a three-year exercise, a group of forty researchers looked at the world of informal practices in nine countries of Southeast Europe. The main strength in their procedures is the reciprocal modification and cross-checking between interviews and media, and the assemblage of comparative quantitative data.
In the context of a mismatch between “the way the world is” and the world as described by law, the Balkans add a unique perspective due to a persistent deficit in state legitimacy and capacity. The underlying agenda is to bring Southeast Europe into line with European liberal democracy. The emerging evidence offers a critical assessment of “Europeanization” processes that produce only superficial changes and formal institutional resolutions. The book offers a rich analysis of the array of informal practices that people in the Balkans have resorted to in compensation for the poor implementation of formal reforms.

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Editors

Eric Gordy

Eric Gordy is Professor of Political and Cultural Sociology at UCL School of Slavonic and East European Studies.

Alena Ledeneva

Alena Ledeneva is Professor of Politics and Society at the University College London and a founder of the Global Informality Project (in-formality.com).

Predrag Cveticanin

Predrag Cveticanin is Associate Professor at the Faculty of Arts, University of Ni., Serbia. He is also the director of the independent research institute Centre for Empirical Studies of Southeast Europe.