ABSTRACT
This article uncovers the pre-1991 origins of Baltic neoliberal regimes. It highlights the role of the communication networks between reformist economists in the Baltic National Fronts and social forces advocating neoliberalism in Scandinavia and the United States. We assert that those networks functioned as the early carriers of ideational and policy change, even if reform contents were authored by domestic rather than transnational agencies. Firstly, the article previews the structural factors conducive to network formation. Secondly, it examines the networks by highlighting cross-national differences. Finally, it chronicles the idiosyncratic paths of neoliberal reformers’ ascendance to the positions of influence.
Acknowledgments
The author received financial support for the research and authorship of this research article from KONE Foundation.
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No potential conflict of interest was reported by the author.
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Jokubas Salyga
Jokubas Salyga is Assistant Professor in the Department of Political Science at the University of Texas Rio Grande Valley. His research interests include the historical sociology of post-communist transformations in the Baltic states, labor resistance in east-central Europe, and the political economy of European integration. This research article has been written in part during his post-doctoral fellowship at the Aleksanteri Institute (Finnish Centre for Russian and Eastern European Studies), University of Helsinki, funded by Kone Foundation.