Journal article

Decolonizing Eastern Europe: A global perspective on 1989 and the world it made


Authors listFowkes, James; Hailbronner, Michaela

Publication year2019

Pages497-509

JournalInternational Journal of Constitutional Law

Volume number17

Issue number2

ISSN1474-2640

eISSN1474-2659

DOI Linkhttps://doi.org/10.1093/icon/moz040

PublisherOxford University Press


Abstract
The end of the Cold War can be usefully understood as a moment of decolonization, and the post-1989 experience, for many states, as a postcolonial one. But we do not usually think in these terms when it comes to Eastern Europe, even though it has faced similar challenges to countries further South. Among those challenges has been the search for a new national and constitutional identity-a task complicated by a colonized past, yielding not a few identity-builders to resort to what we call constitutional kitsch. But we wonder whether Eastern Europeans have been afforded less space to build their own post-1989 identities, compared to places further South. And we wonder if this has to do with our greater sensitivity to this postcolonial need in places where we find such terms more natural, while Eastern Europe may have been too close to Europe for that need to be taken as seriously.



Citation Styles

Harvard Citation styleFowkes, J. and Hailbronner, M. (2019) Decolonizing Eastern Europe: A global perspective on 1989 and the world it made, International Journal of Constitutional Law, 17(2), pp. 497-509. https://doi.org/10.1093/icon/moz040

APA Citation styleFowkes, J., & Hailbronner, M. (2019). Decolonizing Eastern Europe: A global perspective on 1989 and the world it made. International Journal of Constitutional Law. 17(2), 497-509. https://doi.org/10.1093/icon/moz040


Last updated on 2025-02-04 at 00:57