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Transforming Russia: From a Military to a Peace Economy [Pehme köide]

  • Formaat: Paperback / softback, 224 pages, kõrgus x laius: 234x156 mm, kaal: 318 g
  • Ilmumisaeg: 28-Jan-2021
  • Kirjastus: Bloomsbury Academic
  • ISBN-10: 1350178586
  • ISBN-13: 9781350178588
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  • Formaat: Paperback / softback, 224 pages, kõrgus x laius: 234x156 mm, kaal: 318 g
  • Ilmumisaeg: 28-Jan-2021
  • Kirjastus: Bloomsbury Academic
  • ISBN-10: 1350178586
  • ISBN-13: 9781350178588
Teised raamatud teemal:
Based on an empirical examination of all aspects of the Soviet military-technical establishment, this original study examines the de-tooling and conversion of the vast Soviet defence industry, following the end of the Cold War and the collapse of the Soviet Union, that was vital for Russian political, economic and social regeneration and stability, and had huge implications for international relations and the world economy. Grounded in political and social theory, this book explores the post-Soviet regeneration of Eastern Europe.

Muu info

Explores the de-tooling and conversion of the vast Soviet defence industry, following the end of the Cold War, which was vital for Russian political, economic and social stability.
Acknowledgements ix
1 Introduction
1(20)
Renegotiating technology
4(3)
Social worlds
7(2)
Crossing boundaries
9(3)
The contents
12(2)
A view from somewhere
14(7)
2 A Seamless Military Web
21(18)
Was there a MIC?
22(1)
Military technology as a social construction
23(2)
The collapse of institutions
25(3)
A new autonomy
28(3)
The commercial split-up
31(3)
Ts AGI
34(2)
Undoing the social
36(3)
3 Golden Technologies
39(16)
An institutional boundary
40(3)
Spin-off becomes `dual-use'
43(2)
From gold to steel
45(2)
Conversion histories
47(4)
A persistent divide
51(4)
4 `En by I Rusland'
55(20)
The Siberian gateway
55(3)
A militarised community
58(2)
Enterprise neighbourhoods
60(1)
Perm 36
61(2)
The conversion numbers
63(2)
Business discourses
65(3)
Iurii Dudkin
68(4)
A miracle of survival
72(3)
5 Trying Transformations
75(16)
Regional discourses
79(3)
The Perm Auto
82(2)
Pumping with guns
84(3)
Using grounded theory
87(4)
6 Communities of Pride
91(22)
Communities of practice
92(1)
Mobilisation for a sacrifice
93(3)
The technological race
96(2)
Wrong ideology
98(2)
Design cultures
100(1)
Design actors
101(2)
To the world's best standards
103(2)
Vladimir Antsiferov
105(3)
`Habits of thought'
108(5)
7 Making Weapons Invisible in Everyday Life
113(14)
A woman in the boat is bad for sailing
115(2)
Weapons as `products'
117(2)
Articulating ignorance
119(2)
Practices of secrecy
121(3)
`The atmosphere of society'
124(3)
8 Work, Sweet Home
127(14)
The social glue
127(2)
What is a home?
129(1)
Firing women
130(2)
On the market place
132(2)
Nina, director of a fashion center
134(2)
Rethinking identity
136(2)
Engineers turn housewives
138(3)
9 The Making of a Monster
141(18)
The ambiguous partnership
141(2)
Partners in technology
143(2)
The joint venture adventure
145(3)
Enemies turn competitors in joint ventures
148(2)
The magic partnership
150(1)
Technological humiliation
151(3)
Distorted message
154(1)
Recreating otherness
155(4)
10 Renegotiating `Defence' Technologies
159(18)
The case of pulsed power
161(2)
The technological imperative
163(1)
Commercialisation of space
164(3)
New dangers, new defences
167(1)
Doors and frames
168(2)
Kirassa enterprise
170(2)
The defence of the body
172(5)
11 Welfare in Warfare
177(16)
The military and the rest
177(3)
Problems and programmes
180(4)
Restructuring social worlds
184(1)
The transition glue
185(2)
Future fears
187(2)
Could it have been otherwise?
189(4)
Bibliography 193
Appendix: Output Dynamics of Russian Defence Industry 1991-2000
Tarja Cronberg is a researcher at COPRI (Copenhagen Peace Research Institute.