Technology Markets and Export Controls in the 1990's (Institute for East-West Security Studies S.)

by David M. Kemme

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The collapse of the Warsaw Treaty Organization as a military alliance, the new openness in East Central Europe, the breakdown of the Council of Mutual Economic Assistance, and the necessity of modern technology, banking, and telecommunications equipment for the transformation of Eastern European economies have called into question the fundamental rationale for continued Western controls on exports to the East. Since it is no longer in the interest of the West to destabilize or impede Eastern economies by preventing the export of technological goods or information, what then is the most efficient and mutually beneficial course of action with regard to transfers of technology? In this volume, a collection of American, Soviet, Polish, British, and German scholars addresses the most pressing issues involving technology transfers: what has been the role of the Coordinating Committee for Multilateral Export Controls and what should its role be in the future? Have the negative consequences of technology control outweighed the positive? What role has central planning played in stunting technological innovation?
Most importantly, in a post-Cold War security environment, what form should the new export control regime take? The contributors to the volume include Igor Artemiev, Gary K. Bertsch, Steve Elliott-Gower, Claire E. Gordon, Andrzej Rudka, David M. Kemme, and Volkhart Vincentz.
  • ISBN10 0814746179
  • ISBN13 9780814746172
  • Publish Date 15 March 1992
  • Publish Status Out of Print
  • Out of Print 12 March 1997
  • Publish Country US
  • Imprint New York University Press
  • Format Hardcover
  • Pages 139
  • Language English