As central transport hubs of commodities, people and information, ports play a specific and important role in modern societies. This is valid even more so in socialist states. As we argue in this introduction, and subsequently throughout this Forum, socialist ports were in many ways places of exception: in a political system that preferred closed borders, ports symbolized the ‘gates to the world’; in an economic system that was thoroughly planned, ports became the main contact point for global trade outside of a planned economy. Therefore, while socialist ports differed from other socialist entities, they also differed from non-socialist ports, especially regarding the influence of government control and decision-making through state-owned ...
The years between independence of the Baltic States and European enlargement bore witness to substan...
The economic development of the port industry that followed the Second World War was based upon two ...
Since the 1950s, the historical strong link between port and city changed and became weaker. Followi...
As central transport hubs of commodities, people and information, ports play a specific and importan...
International audienceFor the last 20 years, the baltic Sea has been affected by many upheavals, not...
To understand the distinctiveness of ports under state socialism, it is necessary to shift the focus...
Czechoslovakia began to develop its ocean fleet after the communist coup d’état in 1948. Prague was ...
http://www.krihs.re.kr/english/main/main.aspNational audienceThis paper is an empirical attempt to e...
This thesis deals with the Port of Göteborg and its effort to penetrate into the maritime/cargo traf...
Despite ongoing transformations in the maritime transportation industry and the rise of global supp...
In 1945, cross-Baltic commercial links, damaged by World Wars, the Great Depression and protectionis...
There are no doubts about the drastic decreasing of the bargaining power of Dockworkers in the last ...
New developments in a post-Fordist economic environment have changed the source of port competitiven...
The ports of the Baltic states have been handling Russian cargoes for many years. Thus, there is no ...
The years between independence of the Baltic States and European enlargement bore witness to substan...
The economic development of the port industry that followed the Second World War was based upon two ...
Since the 1950s, the historical strong link between port and city changed and became weaker. Followi...
As central transport hubs of commodities, people and information, ports play a specific and importan...
International audienceFor the last 20 years, the baltic Sea has been affected by many upheavals, not...
To understand the distinctiveness of ports under state socialism, it is necessary to shift the focus...
Czechoslovakia began to develop its ocean fleet after the communist coup d’état in 1948. Prague was ...
http://www.krihs.re.kr/english/main/main.aspNational audienceThis paper is an empirical attempt to e...
This thesis deals with the Port of Göteborg and its effort to penetrate into the maritime/cargo traf...
Despite ongoing transformations in the maritime transportation industry and the rise of global supp...
In 1945, cross-Baltic commercial links, damaged by World Wars, the Great Depression and protectionis...
There are no doubts about the drastic decreasing of the bargaining power of Dockworkers in the last ...
New developments in a post-Fordist economic environment have changed the source of port competitiven...
The ports of the Baltic states have been handling Russian cargoes for many years. Thus, there is no ...
The years between independence of the Baltic States and European enlargement bore witness to substan...
The economic development of the port industry that followed the Second World War was based upon two ...
Since the 1950s, the historical strong link between port and city changed and became weaker. Followi...