This book presents the phenomenon of economic nationalism in interwar East-Central Europe and to define its role in the region's development. It analyzes both the intent and the efficacy of nationalist policies and economic protectionism in these regions.
Jan Kofman is professor of history and political science at the University of Warsaw (the Bialystok Branch) and at the Institute of Political Studies of the Polish Academy of Sciences. He is also editor in chief and deputy director of Polish Scientific Publishers PWN, the largest academic publishing house in Poland. He was editor in chief of KRYTYKA (1982-1995), an underground turned official political quarterly established in 1978.
Introduction Part One: Contents Economic Nationalism: Description 1. Theoretical and Research Approaches 2. Economic Nationalism: Overview, Sources, and Causes 3. Directions and Instruments of Economic Nationalism 4. Tentative Conclusions Part Two: Protectionism as a Response to Underdevelopment 5. On Protectionism's Theory and Practice 6. Policy of Protectionism in East and Central Europe: Overview 7. Protectionism in the Region: The Experience of Poland, Czechoslovakia, and Bulgaria 8. Recapitulation and Conclusions 9. Epilogue: Questions for Discussion, Hypotheses, and Summary