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Dear colleagues,

please find below a brand-new call for papers that, hopefully, attracts 
your interest.

Best regards,

Thomas Steger



*************************

*Journal of East European Management Studies*

Call for Papers for a Special Issue

*State-Business Relations in Post-socialist Europe after Transition*

**

Guest editors:

*Dorottya Sallai*, Greenwich University, UK

*Gerhard Schnyder*, Loughborough University London, UK

*Elena Zavyalova*, MGIMO University, Moscow, RUS

Soon after the fall of the Iron Curtain, it became clear that the end of 
state socialism in Eastern Europe did not necessarily imply the end of 
state domination over the economy and firm practices. Early studies 
found, that the post-socialist state – through its control over the 
banking system for instance – continued to influence firm-level 
strategies regarding product innovation, restructurings, supply chains, 
and human resource management (Whitley & Czaban, 1998a, 1998b). More 
generally, management scholars, political scientists, and sociologists 
found that the role of the state in post-socialist economies remained 
much more prominent and much more complex than initial optimistic 
accounts of “transition” and the “retreat of the state” had suggested 
(Martin, 2002, 2013; Schoenman, 2005; Stark, 1996; Stark & Bruszt, 
2001). Thus, the initial retreat of the socialist state was slower than 
expected during the early 1990s. More recently, various transition 
economies may even experience a return of the state as an active player 
in the economy in its own right (Bremmer, 2008; Kurlantzick, 2016; 
Musacchio, Lazzarini, & Aguilera, 2015l; Sallai & Schnyder, 2018). In 
such cases, the state does not only intervene as a regulator – as the 
ideal-typical idea of liberal capitalism would have it – , but also as 
an owner of large companies, and designer of industrial policy directed 
towards promoting certain industries over others (see Hofman, Moon, & 
Wu, 2017).

More generally, one common characteristic of post-socialist countries is 
that the separation between the state sphere and the economy is more 
fluid than in established Western market-economies. This is partly a 
result of the process of post-socialist transformation. Creating 
capitalist market economies on the rubbles of the communist system has 
meant that post-socialist countries faced the tremendous challenge of 
creating a ‘capitalist class’ from scratch. Various types of 
privatisation processes of the vast state assets, and different 
political dynamics in different countries, have led to very different 
elite structures (Bandelj, 2008; King, 2001; Schoenman, 2005; Walder, 
2003; Wedel, 2003). Yet, they share the common feature that the new 
economic elite did not emerge completely independently from the 
communist political elite, leading to complex interrelations between the 
two.

This has direct implications for the strategies of companies operating 
in such contexts. Specifically, managing the political environment 
becomes even more important for firms in post-socialist countries than 
in Western established capitalist economies (White, Fainshmidt, & 
Rajwani, 2017). Yet, the literature on such strategies in emerging 
markets and in particular in the post-socialist context remains 
underdeveloped (Deng & Kennedy, 2010; Mondejar & Zhao, 2013; White et 
al., 2017; Zhang, Zhao, & Ge, 2016). One exception is political ties. 
Political ties, as one particular form of political strategy, has seen 
considerable attention and underscore the importance of strategies to 
manage the firm’s dependence on the state especially in countries like 
Russia and China (Okhmatovskiy, 2010; Sun, Mellahi, & Thun, 2010; Sun, 
Mellahi, Wright, & Xu, 2015). Political ties and more broadly informal 
networks in state-business relations have been also widely recognised in 
some post-socialist countries that are now EU members, such as Poland 
(McMenamin and Schoenman, 2007, Schoenman, 2005) and Hungary (Stark, 
1996, Stark and Vedres, 2012, Danis et al., 2009). Studies conclude that 
the weak nature of formal institutions in post-socialist states 
encourages firms to develop political activities based on business 
networks (Peng and Heath, 1996) and informal relationships (Peng, 2003, 
Luo and Zhao, 2013). Studies in the area of public affairs (McGrath et 
al., 2010) and corruption (Millar and Koppl, 2014), highlight the 
differences between Western and post-socialist public affairs culture 
(Harsanyi and Schmidt, 2012) and the issue that political strategies in 
post-socialist states remain a taboo (Sallai, 2013).

However, beyond political ties, other types of political resources, 
capabilities or lobbying strategies, have largely been neglected 
(Schnyder & Sallai, 2018). There are very few studies systematically 
analysing other political strategies – including information strategies, 
financial incentives strategies, and constituency building strategies 
(Hillman & Hitt, 1999)–, compared to the much better researched Western 
context. Furthermore, few studies have investigated how and why 
non-market strategies (Mellahi, Frynas, Sun, & Siegel, 2016)and their 
effectiveness vary across post-socialist settings (Akbar & Kisilowski, 
2015). We therefore encourage submissions that investigate the 
specificities of non-market strategies in post-socialist settings, in 
particular in comparative fashion.

The specificities of post-socialist economies also has implications for 
the meso-level of state-business relationships: Given the politicised 
nature of post-socialist economies (Martin, 2002), state-business 
relationships are particularly important in post-socialist contexts. 
Various disciplines provide theoretical tools to analyse these 
relationships reaching from political science literature on lobbying and 
interest group politics (Eising, 2007; Sallai, 2013; Schnyder, 2012), to 
the corporate political activity (CPA) literature in management studies 
(Rajwani, Lawton, & Mcguire, 2013), and classical theories of business 
embedding in the state hierarchy in development studies (Evans, 1995; 
Johnson, 1982). All these theoretical tools have to date been 
insufficiently mobilised to understand how firms are embedded in the 
post-socialist context (Block & Negoita, 2016). Conversely Central and 
Eastern Europe – and the post-socialist context more generally – 
constitute very promising fields for theory development on these crucial 
issues of state-business relationships. We therefore also encourage the 
submission of papers that focus on the intermediate level of analysis, 
in particular studies adopting and interdisciplinary approach.

At the macro-level, the specific role and nature of post-socialist 
business systems and specifically the role of the state in them, are not 
often directly investigated and their impact on firm strategies is still 
not well understood. The comparative capitalism or comparative 
institutional analysis (CIA) literature (Fainshmidt, Judge, Aguilera, & 
Smith, 2016; Jackson & Deeg, 2008; Saka-Helmhout, Deeg, & Greenwood, 
2016)distinguishes provides various labels to describe national business 
systems with more interventionist states than the typical Western 
‘regulatory-‘ or ‘welfare’ states. These include– most commonly – ‘state 
capitalism’ (Musacchio et al., 2015)and ‘authoritarian capitalism’ (Witt 
& Redding, 2014). Some typologies more specifically distinguish the role 
of the state according to classical distinctions of regulatory-, 
developmental-, welfare-, and predatory states; with post-socialist 
countries falling either into the predatory or developmental categories 
(Fainshmidt et al., 2016). However, these attempts to describe and 
analyse the role of the state in post-socialism are often 
decontextualized and lack nuance across cases. Yet, these nuances are 
important to understand specific firm-level reactions to specific 
problems and opportunities created by the post-socialist state (King, 
2001; Schoenman, 2005). We therefore also encourage submissions that 
take as the unit of analysis post-socialist national business systems as 
long as they allow us to further our understanding of how variations in 
the role of the state and macro-level factors shape firm- or 
individual-level practices and strategies in these contexts.

This special issue invites papers addressing questions related to these 
three topics: The impact of the role of the state in post-socialist and 
post-soviet countries on firm-level outcomes and strategies; firms’ 
non-market strategies in response to post-socialist states; 
state-business relationships in post-socialist countries. These can 
include, but are not limited to:

1.Cross-country comparisons of what type of state business relationships 
lead to superior firm-level and country-level outcomes.

2.Cross-country comparisons of non-market strategies in post-socialist 
and post-soviet contexts.

3.Longitudinal studies exploring how non-market strategies change/evolve 
in the context of post-socialist transformation.

4.Papers addressing the specificities of the two-way relationship 
between firm lobbying and state intervention.

5.Heterogeneity and determinants of firm-level non-market strategies in 
dealing with different types of post-socialist regimes.

6.Determinants of the effectiveness of different firm-level non-market 
strategies in different post-socialist settings.

7.Studies on foreign subsidiary and domestic firm political capabilities 
and non-market strategies and the determinants of their effectiveness.

8.Studies on the ways in which businesses organise their interest 
representation in a post-socialist context.

We welcome submissions focussing on cross-country comparisons or on 
single country-cases, as well as large-N firm-level studies, firm- or 
country-level case studies, and country-level comparative research, as 
long as they contain a clear and explicit link to the organisational- or 
individual-level.

Please submit your paper of no later than June 1, 2019 5pm CET by 
e-mailing it to [log in to unmask] <mailto:[log in to unmask]>. 
All papers have to conform with the JEEMS author guidelines: 
https://www.jeems.nomos.de/fileadmin/jeems/doc/Authors_Guidelines.pdf

*Timeline for SI:*

1.February 2019 call to be published

2.Deadline for submission of full papers (10,000 words) *15^th June 2019*

3.Late June 2019 desk rejections

4.June - August, 2019 – 1^st round R&R (6 weeks deadline for reviewers)

5.September 2019: decisions and invitation of papers for workshop

6.Workshop to be held at MGIMO Moscow November/December 2019

7.December 31^st , 2019 deadline for resubmissions

8.January 2020-Feburary 2020, 2^nd round R&R

9.February 2020: decisions

10.May 2020: deadline for resubmissions

11.May-June 2020: 3^rd R&R

12.July-August 2020 final decisions/conditional acceptance

13.Autumn 2020 - publication


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