Lexington Books
Pages: 170
Trim: 6⅜ x 9⅜
978-1-4985-3197-9 • Hardback • November 2017 • $111.00 • (£85.00)
978-1-4985-3198-6 • eBook • November 2017 • $105.50 • (£82.00)
Lena Surzhko-Harned is assistant teaching professor of comparative politics at Penn State University.
Ekaterina Turkina is associate professor in the Department of International Business at HEC Montreal.
Series Foreword, by Michael Slobodchikoff
Preface
Introduction: Post-communist transition and Conflict in Europe
Chapter 1: A Generation Apart: How the Post-Communist Transition Shaped the Post-Soviet Values
Chapter 2: Generational Differences in Values in Europe
Chapter 3: Supranational Norms and Domestic Value Change: Evidence from Ukraine
Chapter 4: Russia-Ukraine Conflict: Value-based and Generational Perspective
Chapter 5: Social Networks in Russian-Ukrainian Conflict
Conclusion
Appendix A: “Our Generations” Interview Questionnaire
Appendix B: Descriptive Statistics on the Interviewees
Appendix C: World Values Survey Questions
Appendix D: Survey Protocol
References
About the Authors
Nevertheless, this book provides a rich resource for those interested in cultural value shifts and sociopolitical attitudes in the post-Soviet region, and its cautious note of optimism is very welcome.
— The Russian Review
This is a masterfully executed study of political culture and behavior that reads like a novel. Surzhko-Harned and Turkina focus on the profound inter-generational change of values caused by the transition from communism in Russia and Ukraine, to provide nuanced, insightful, and multi-dimensional explanations for developments inside the two countries, their relations with each other, and their interactions with the European Union.
— Kostas Kourtikakis, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign
In this book, Lena Surzhko-Harned and Ekaterina Turkina address changing values of the new generation in the space of transition states, one of the most critical challenges facing post-Soviet countries. The research demonstrates the extensive implications of the growing and potentially fluid issue of cultural values and European integration of the post-Communist states. Authors provide a tremendous analysis of the Russia-Ukrainian conflict, European integration, and Russia-EU tensions, exploiting transitional experience of generations on the post-Soviet space. This is a timely addition to the growing literature on values transition in general and Post-Communist studies in particular.
— Oxana Karnaukhova, Southern Federal University
Throughout history, the destruction of states, conflicts, and wars have always rapidly transformed identities, and within the space of only a quarter of a century, Generation WhY in Russia and Ukraine have felt the end of Soviet power, two color revolutions, and war between their countries. This is a lucid and important book that is the first to methodically analyze the impact of these transformative developments on the identities of Russian and Ukrainian Generation WhY, how they began to diverge long before the 2014 crisis and why this will further deepen the differences between them and their parent’s Soviet generation. Stalin invented the concept of Russian-Ukrainian “brotherly peoples,” Putin buried it and Generation WhY will have to live in and with the brave new world they have inherited.
— Taras Kuzio, Johns Hopkins University
The book is an impressive scientific endeavor offering a thorough and rigorous analysis of how values persist and change in post-Socialist societies—both across generations and countries. The insights of the book could be of tremendous help in understanding the failures and successes of post-Socialist transition and the conflicts within and across post-Soviet states—a must read for political scientists and sociologists with a focus on the post-Socialist region!
— Alexander Libman, Freie Universität Berlin