The issue concerns differing aspects of political and economic transformation in Poland and other countries of the former Soviet bloc in the Central and Eastern Europe. The transformation in Central and Eastern Europe is still commonly understood as a transition from communist dictatorship to political, personal, and economic freedom. The causes that initiated this transformation are well established: the Soviet Union’s defeat in its military-political rivalry with the United States, alongside the exhaustion of the Soviet Bloc’s economic model, which was ideologically driven and subordinated to the USSR’s economic and military imperatives.
The issue opens with a record of an editorial debate featuring Prof. Antoni Dudek, Prof. Krzysztof Brzechczyn, and Dr. Michał Przeperski – Polish scholars specialising in aspects of political and social transformation in Poland and Central Europe. Among the published texts is an essay by Prof. Alexandr Tomský on the effects of transformation in the Czech Republic, a presentation of the Berlin Wall Foundation, penned by Juliane Haubold-Stolle and Axel Klausmeier, and articles by: Andrzej Zawistowski (professor at the Warsaw School of Economics) on economic transformation in Poland at the turn of the 1980s and 1990s; Paweł Popieliński (researcher at the Institute of Political Studies of the Polish Academy of Sciences in Warsaw) on social transformation processes in East Germany; Marta Marcinkiewicz (researcher at the Institute of National Remembrance) on plans to introduce a state of emergency in Poland in 1988; Agnieszka Kolasa-Nowak (professor at Maria Curie-Skłodowska University in Lublin) on Polish sociologists’ perspectives on the interpretation of transformation in Poland; Antoni Dudek (professor at Cardinal Stefan Wyszyński University in Warsaw) on two significant cases of abuses related to the early transformation, namely the so-called alcohol affair and the process of so-called party nomenklatura privatisation; Cristian Vasile (historian at the Nicolae Iorga Institute of History in Bucharest) on the state of research concerning the Romanian revolution of 1989; and finally Andrei Ursu (historian at the Romanian December 1989 Revolution Institute) and Andreea Badila (historian at the Institute for Defence Political Studies and Military History in Bucharest) on the Romanian revolution of 1989.