Tuesday, March 31, 2020
Communism Downfall Essays - Eastern Bloc, Revolutions, West Germany
  Communism Downfall    The shocking fall of communism in Eastern and Central Europe in the late  eighties was remarkable for both its rapidity and its scope. The specifics of  communism's demise varied among nations, but similarities in both the causes and  the effects of these revolutions were quite similar. As well, all of the nations  involved shared the common goals of implementing democratic systems of  government and moving to market economies. In each of these nations, the  communist regimes in power were forced to transfer that power to radically  different institutions than they were accustomed to. Democracy had been  spreading throughout the world for the preceding two decades, but with a very  important difference. While previous political transitions had seen similar  circumstances, the actual events in question had generally occurred  individually. In Europe, on the other hand, the shift from communism was taking  place in a different context altogether. The peoples involved were not looking  to affect a narrow set of policy reforms; indeed, what was at stake was a  hyper-radical shift from the long-held communist ideology to a western blueprint  for governmental and economic policy development. The problem inherent in this  type of monumental change is that, according to Ulrich K. Preuss, "In  almost all the East and Central European countries, the collapse of  authoritarian communist rule has released national, ethnic, religious and  cultural conflicts which can not be solved by purely economic policies"  (47). While tremendous changes are evident in both the governmental and economic  arenas in Europe, these changes cannot be assumed to always be "mutually  reinforcing" (Preuss 47). Generally it has been theorized that the most  successful manner of addressing these many difficulties is the drafting of a  constitution. But what is clear is the unsatisfactory ability of a constitution  to remedy the problems of nationalism and ethnic differences. Preuss notes that  when the constitutional state gained favor in North America, it was founded on  the principle of the unitary state; it was not designed to address the lack of  national identity which is found throughout Europe - and which is counter to the  concept of the constitutional state (48). "Measured in terms of  socioeconomic modernization," writes Helga A. Welsh, "Central and    Eastern European countries had reached a level that was considered conducive to  the emergence of pluralistic policies" (19). It seemed that the sole reason  the downfall of communism, as it were, took so long was the veto power of the    Soviet Union. According to theories of modernization, the higher the levels of  socioeconomic achievement, the greater the pressure for open competition and,  ultimately, democracy. As such, the nations in Eastern and Central Europe were  seen as "anomalies in socioeconomically highly-developed countries where  particularly intellectual power resources have become widespread" (Welsh    19). Due to their longtime adherence to communist policies, these nations faced  great difficulty in making the transition to a pluralist system as well as a  market economy. According to Preuss, these problems were threefold: The genuine  economic devastations wrought by the communist regimes, the transformation of  the social and economic classes of the command economy into the social and  economic lasses of a capitalist economy and, finally, the creation of a  constitutional structure for political entities that lack the undisputed  integrity of a nation state (48). With such problems as these to contend with in  re- engineering their entire economic and political systems, the people of East    Germany seemed to be in a particularly enviable position. Economically, they  were poised to unite with one of the richest countries, having one of the  strongest economies, in the entire world. In the competition for foreign  investment, such an alliance gave the late German Democratic Republic a  seemingly insurmountable lead over other nations. In regards to the political  aspects of unification, it effectively left a Germany with no national or ethnic  minorities, as well as having undisputed boundaries. As well, there was no need  to create a constitution (although many of the pitfalls of constitution-  building would have been easily-avoided due to the advantages Germany had),  because the leaders of the GDR had joined the Federal Republic by accession and,  accordingly, allowed its Basic Law to be extended over their territory. For all  the good that seemed to be imminent as a result of unification, many problems  also arose regarding the political transformation that Germany was undergoing.    Among these problems were the following: the tensions between the Basic Law's  simultaneous commitments to supranational integration and to the German nation  state, the relationship between the nation and the constitution as two different  modes of political integration and the issue of so- called "backward  justice" (Preuss    
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