- Author:
Marek Barszcz
- Institution:
Uniwersytet Kazimierza Wielkiego w Bydgoszczy
- Year of publication:
2016
- Source:
Show
- Pages:
249-262
- DOI Address:
https://doi.org/10.15804/siip201613
- PDF:
siip/15/siip1513.pdf
History of the labour law and the contemporary labor market policy in Poland
In 1989, he began the process of systemic transformation, which concerned the labor market, based on a rejection of the current legal status of labor law. In the study, changes in the market, the author used the analysis of the institutional and legal in conjunction with the recognition decision policy. The author took the research period of systemic transformation and change in recent years (since 2014) with the proposals programmatic political parties.
- Author:
Jacek Wojnicki
- E-mail:
jacekwojnicki@poczta.onet.pl
- Institution:
Warsaw University
- ORCID:
https://orcid.org/0000-0002-4289-989X
- Year of publication:
2020
- Source:
Show
- Pages:
481-499
- DOI Address:
https://doi.org/10.15804/ppk.2020.05.35
- PDF:
ppk/57/ppk5735.pdf
The article discusses the issues of evolution of the political position of heads of government in Hungary. The time frame is between 1990 and 2020. A wide historical spectrum is included as well, showing the transformations of the supreme bodies of state power. After 1989, Hungary opted to establish a parliamentary cabinet system, with some strengthening of the government’s powers. The institution of the Prime Minister has become a real instrument of political power for the leaders of political factions in the countries discussed. The analysis takes into account both constitutional regulations and political practice over the past nearly 30 years. A particular strengthening of the political position of the Prime Minister can be seen after 2010.
- Author:
Tomasz Herudziński
- Institution:
Warsaw University of Life Sciences
- Year of publication:
2014
- Source:
Show
- Pages:
159-172
- DOI Address:
https://doi.org/10.15804/kie.2014.06.09
- PDF:
kie/106/kie10609.pdf
The article describes the commodification process, focusing on the sphere of labour. The specificity of the approach consists of treating labour as a component of the systemic transformation of the Polish society. The Polish people, on their way from real socialism to market democracy, are undergoing a particularly intense commodification process. This process has been intensified by Poland’s accession to the European Union and by globalisation, due to participation in supranational market systems at the regional (European) and global levels. Empirically, the commodification process has been analysed using awareness studies. Subjects were young inhabitants of Warsaw with higher education, and the study results were additionally related to nationallevel research. The labour sphere is seen here as a key element of the wider social reality and it is studied empirically in terms of individual orientations which the subjects exhibit towards normative social models. The processes of commodification and decommodification are seen in the context of the systemic transformation from centralisedautocratic to the marketdemocratic models of society. Attention has also been paid to the role of the welfare state, whose key function is to protect citizens from major risks, including the risk of being unemployed. The empirical study clearly shows the specificity of labour in commodification processes. Labour was shown to be an element that stands out from the other elements of the social system.
- Author:
Małgorzata Kamola-Cieślik
- E-mail:
malgorzata.kamola-cieslik@usz.edu.pl
- Institution:
University of Szczecin
- ORCID:
https://orcid.org/0000-0003-2956-3969
- Year of publication:
2023
- Source:
Show
- Pages:
31-44
- DOI Address:
https://doi.org/10.15804/rop2023403
- PDF:
rop/26/rop2603.pdf
Privatisation of the Gdansk shipyard was to prevent its collapse. The act on privatisation of state-owned enterprises, adopted by the parliament in 1990, set the rules to govern the ownership transformation process. The article is to analyse the privatisation process of Stocznia Gdańska im. Lenina and the impact of state-owned institutions on the course of the privatisation in the period 1990-2007. A theses has been presented that Polish governments had no consistent concept for ownership transformation policy regarding the Gdansk shipyard. An attempt has been undertaken to answer the following research question: what factors affected the Gdansk shipyard privatisation process? The interdisciplinary approach to the analysed phenomenon enforced the application of research methods appropriate to political science, legal sciences, and sociology. The case of Gdansk shipyard testifies to absence of a privatisation policy on the part of the government, and wrong management by the shipyard authorities.
- Author:
Judyta Bielanowska
- Institution:
Europejskie Centrum Solidarności w Gdańsku / Wyższa Szkoła Kształcenia Zawodowego we Wrocławiu
- ORCID:
https://orcid.org/0000-0002-6764-7859
- Year of publication:
2023
- Source:
Show
- Pages:
85-97
- DOI Address:
https://doi.org/10.15804/CCNiW.2023.02.06
- PDF:
ccniw/2/ccniw206.pdf
The participation of the Catholic Church in the systemic changes in Poland is unquestionable. The significant role of church hierarchs, middle- and lower-level pastors in accelerating the erosion of the communist dictatorship in Poland over the years, and especially in the last decade of the Polish People’s Republic, is unquestionable. Analogous processes of political, social, economic and cultural changes taking place in neighboring countries where Catholicism was the dominant religion were also stimulated to a large extent by representatives of the clergy. However, the issue of the importance of the Orthodox Church in the Soviet Union for the systemic changes at the end of the 1980s remains slightly more complicated. Therefore, the article compares two powerful Churches, Catholic and Orthodox, from the point of view of analogy and diff erences in the role, influence and importance of these institutions for the collapse of both authoritarian systems.