Chapter 1 Coping with Complexity: Alternative Explanations Chapter 2 Self-Organization versus Autocracy: Crusaders to Commissars Chapter 3 Nonviolent Revolution: How Three Davids Undermined Goliath Chapter 4 Creating Good Government: Who Won What When? Chapter 5 Self-Organization and Social Capital Chapter 6 Human Development: Winners, Losers, and the Internet Chapter 7 Integration: Coping with Ethnic Complexity Chapter 8 Energy for a New Life: From Dependency to Interdependence Chapter 9 Tigers on the Baltic: Can the Small Be Fit? Chapter 10 Russia: Threat or Partner? Chapter 11 Enhancing Baltic Security: NATO and Other Options, 2000–2010 Chapter 12 Baltic Fitness, European Security, and International Relations: What Does Complexity Theory Explain?
Walter C. Clemens, Jr., is professor of political science at Boston University and an associate at Harvard's Center for Science and International Affairs and the Davis Center for Russian Studies.
Beyond presenting a new way to look at the world, Clemens has
provided readers with an excellent resource to study a region of
the world that should receive more analysis then it does.
*East European Politics and Societies*
An authoritative account of the successful Baltic
transition…studded with pithy observation and historically rooted
insight….Clemens' sweeping command of the region allows for a
nuanced treatment of all three small but complex countries.
*The Russian Review*
Provides interesting analyses of how the Baltic societies mastered
the challenges of foreign domination. . . . Rich with data,
reflections, and perspectives.
*Slavic Review*
The Baltic Transformed...gives the best available introduction to
Estonia, Latvia and Lithuania today, while at the same time
presenting cogent arguments for the importance of studying these
three countries in the 21st century. The book also provides a
valuable history of the Baltic in the 1990’s.
*America: The Jesuit Review of Faith & Culture*
Clemens provides a detailed societal-wide overview of the
transition of the Baltic States since 1991. Rather than limiting
himself to political and economic developments, Clemens also
focuses on broader issues of health, education, social
institutions, minority and citizenship questions, the environment,
crime, and differences in generational perceptions. Particularly
interesting is his analysis of how the Balts worked within the
Soviet system in order to exit it.
*Millennium*
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