Private properties issues following the change of political regime in former socialist or communist countries Albania, Bosnia and Herzegovina, Bulgaria, Croatia, Romania and Serbia
Some transformations occurred in the area of private property ownership following the change of political regime in former socialist or communist countries. The six analysed countries (Albania, Bosnia and Herzegovina, Bulgaria, Croatia, Romania and Serbia) illustrate well the whole range of contentious problems in a region where the Communist regimes have varied tremendously in their approach to private property, intensity of social control, repression and overall legitimacy. This diversity of situations poses today different types of dilemmas for the property restitution process and these six countries responded in different manners to these general challenges, in the context of their own peculiar social and economic history.
Study
External author
Romanian Academic Society (RAS), Romania ; with the collaboration of: Centre for Liberal Strategies (CLS), Bulgaria, Partnership for Social Development (PSD), Croatia
About this document
Publication type
Keyword
- change of political system
- civil law
- economic structure
- ECONOMICS
- European construction
- European Court of Human Rights
- European organisations
- EUROPEAN UNION
- expropriation
- former socialist countries
- GEOGRAPHY
- INTERNATIONAL ORGANISATIONS
- LAW
- political framework
- political geography
- POLITICS
- post-communism
- private property
- the EU's international role