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            Moldova, Ukraine, and Belarus are beset by economic  Mazower, M. (2000). The Balkans: A short history. New York: Modern
            and political problems. Eastern Europe remains an     Library.
                                                                Naimark, N., & Gibianskii, L. (Eds.). (1997). The establishment of Com-
            exporter of natural resources.The principal resource now  munist regimes in Eastern Europe, 1944–1949. Boulder, CO: West-
            is labor: industrial workers find jobs throughoutWestern  view Press.
                                                                Rothschild, J. (1974). East central Europe between the two World Wars.
            Europe, while educated young people leave for universi-
                                                                  Seattle: University of Washington Press.
            ties—and jobs—in Western Europe and North America.  Stavrianos, L. S. (2000). The Balkans since 1453. New York: New York
            Some observers take these as positive signs of post-  University Press.
                                                                Stokes, G. (1993). The walls came tumbling down: The collapse of Com-
            Communist Eastern Europe’s integration with the world.  munism in Eastern Europe. Oxford, UK: Oxford University Press.
            But the road will be long. According to estimates, even  Sugar, P. F. (1977). Southeastern Europe under Ottoman rule, 1354–
                                                                  1804. Seattle: University of Washington Press.
            the region’s most advanced countries (Poland, Hungary,
                                                                Sugar, P. F., & Lederer, I. J. (Eds.). (1984). Nationalism in Eastern
            Czech Republic) will not reach Western European eco-  Europe. Seattle: University of Washington Press.
            nomic levels for another fifty years.                Szucs, J. (1983).The three historical regions of Europe: An outline. Acta
                                                                  Historica Academiae Scientiarium Hungaricae, 29, 131–84.
                                                                Turnock, D. (1989). Eastern Europe: An historical geography, 1815–
                                               Bruce Berglund
                                                                  1945. New York: Routledge.
                                                                Wandycz, P. S. (1992). The price of freedom: A history of east central
            See also Europe; Inner Eurasia; Russian-Soviet Empire
                                                                  Europe from the Middle Ages to the present. New York: Routledge.
                                                                Wolff, L. (1994). Inventing Eastern Europe:The map of civilization on the
                                                                  mind of the Enlightenment. Stanford, CA: Stanford University Press.
                               Further Reading
            Berend, I.T., & Ránki, G. (1974). Economic development in east-central
              Europe in the 19th and 20th centuries. New York: Columbia Univer-
              sity Press.
            Brubaker, R. (1996). Nationalism reframed: Nationhood and the national  Economic Growth,
              question in the new Europe. Cambridge, UK: Cambridge University
              Press.
            Chirot, D. (Ed.). (1989). The origins of backwardness in Eastern Europe:  Extensive and
              Economics and politics from the Middle Ages until the early twentieth
              century. Berkeley: University of California Press.
            Dingsdale, A. (2002). Mapping modernities: Geographies of central and       Intensive
              Eastern Europe, 1920–2000. New York: Routledge.
            Dvornik, F. (1956). The Slavs:Their early history and civilization. Boston:
              American Academy of Arts & Sciences.                  conomic growth is an increase in the total value of
            Hajnal, J. (1965). European marriage patterns in perspective. In Glass,  Egoods and services produced by a given society.
              D.V., & Eversley, D. E. C. (Eds.), Population in history: Essays in his-
              torical demography. London: E. Arnold.            There is little common agreement, however, on how
            Hajnal, J. (1983). Two kinds of pre-industrial household formation sys-  best to measure this value precisely. Many distortions are
              tems. In Wall, R. (Ed.), Family forms in historic Europe. Cambridge,
              UK: Cambridge University Press.                   possible even in societies where most goods and services
            Halecki, O. (1952). Borderlands of Western civilization: A history of east  are provided by specialists and exchanged for money—
              central Europe. New York: Roland Press.           so that prices provide some standard of measure of the
            I ˙ nalcik, H., & Quataert, D. (1994). An economic and social history of the
              Ottoman Empire. Cambridge, UK: Cambridge University Press.  relative value people assign, for instance, to a sack of rice,
            Janos, A. C. (2000). East central Europe in the modern world:The politics  an hour of childcare, an automobile, or a concert ticket.
              of the borderlands from pre- to postcommunism. Stanford, CA: Stanford
              University Press.                                 Measuring economic growth is still more difficult where
            Johnson, L. R. (2001). Central Europe: Enemies, neighbors, friends (2nd  economic activity is carried on outside the market, and
              ed.). New York: Oxford University Press.          thus not given a price that makes it comparable to other
            Kaufman,T. D. (1995). Court, cloister, and city:The art and culture of cen-
              tral Europe, 1450–1800. Chicago: University of Chicago Press.  products. (For example, if hired cooks are paid enough
            Kenney, P. (2002). A carnival of revolution: Central Europe 1989. Prince-  each hour to buy five square meters of cloth, then we
              ton, NJ: Princeton University Press.
            Magocsi, P. R. (2002). Historical atlas of central Europe. Seattle: Uni-  know something about how to add cooking and cloth-
              versity of Washington Press.                      making together in an index of total value produced;
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