© Columbia University Press
December, 2012
Cloth, 320 pages,
ISBN: 978-0-231-70376-5
$55.00
Ever since Greece’s 1974 transition to democracy, there has been constant talk of the need for system-wide political reform. Major changes in the country’s economy, society, and population have forced Greek institutions and policies to become better aligned with those of more developed, West European countries, yet there is still work to be done. Some reforms, such as the creation of the National Health Service, entry into the Eurozone, the liberalization of banking practices, and the privatization of some business, have succeeded. Others, such as educational, pension, and civil service reforms, reappear now and then yet largely remain elusive. The Greek malaise, widely felt and discussed in the country, has intensified the desire for more action, yet these efforts have also prompted systematic resistance from organized interest groups, which feeds the broadly perceived sense of inertia and stagnation, or at least truncated progress.