The Open Economy and Its Enemies: Public Attitudes in East Asia and Eastern Europe

by Jane Duckett and William L. Miller

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There is a vigorous debate about the merits of globalisation for developing countries. Based on numerous focus-group discussions and over 10,000 interviews, this book studies economic and cultural openness from the perspective of the public in four developing or 'transitional' countries: Vietnam, (South) Korea, the Czech Republic and Ukraine (both before and after the Orange Revolution). It finds many supporters of opening up, but also many who are discontented with its downsides and who expect states to tackle the exploitation and unfairness that accompany it. Among the most fervent enemies of openness there is support not just for peaceful public protest to tackle the problems it brings, but for violence or sabotage. The methodology provides a unique opportunity for the public in developing countries to 'speak with their own voices' about markets and openness - and highlights the subtlety, ambiguity, tensions, conflicts and emotion that statistics alone fail to capture.
  • ISBN10 6610749353
  • ISBN13 9786610749355
  • Publish Date 1 January 2006
  • Publish Status Active
  • Out of Print 29 December 2011
  • Publish Country US
  • Imprint Cambridge University Press
  • Format eBook
  • Pages 285
  • Language English