e-journal
Conceptualizing Historical Legacies
In the nearly quarter century since the collapse of communism, a great many outcomes
in East Europe and the former Soviet Union, from patterns of democratic consolidation
to state–society relations, have been attributed to legacies of the past. Yet despite the
common goal of understanding the influence of the past, there is little consensus on
how to conceptualize historical legacies. Through a focus on post-communist outcomes
and their relation to prior outcomes and causal precursors, this article assesses what
counts as a historical legacy and how legacies differ from non-legacies.
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