23 janvier 2013
https://www.openedition.org/12554 , info:eu-repo/semantics/openAccess
Szalai Erzsebet, « Chapter 5. The Socio-Cultural Heritage and Its Structural Effects », Central European University Press, ID : 10670/1.o7pdqe
The fact that ‘existing socialism’ was not, and could not be, either a ‘community society’ or ‘democratic socialism,’ and therefore became susceptible to the expectations of the ‘superstructure’ at an early stage, is due to historically determined socio-cultural factors as well as structural ones. THE ORGANIC NATURE OF INORGANIC DEVELOPMENT There are no significant historical traditions of community and democratic behavior in the region, including Hungary, and the existing historical traditi...