[b] The idea of queuing in the memorialistic literature[/b]

Abstract

The present paper displays some characteristics of the food crisis in Romania during the 1980s. Daily life in communist Romania was a difficult issue, with the socialist economy serving the commands of the Party’s leaders. In order to pay the country’s foreign debt, Ceauşescu introduced the system of cards, the only way that allowed people to buy food. Romania was the country where people queued daily when they wanted to buy bread, meat, milk and any other food product.

Authors and Affiliations

Corina Buţea

Keywords

Related Articles

 INTEGRAREA COMUNITĂŢII IUDAICE ÎN BRĂILA INTERBELICĂ/ The integration of the Jewish communities from interwar Braila

 Throughout the interwar period, the Jewish community sought to integrate into the society from Braila. From its ranks, personalities such as Michael Sebastian, S. Semilian, the Mendl, Guttman and Goldenberg familie...

 The contribution of Alexandru II Mircea to the formation of the feudal domain of the Holy Trinity (Radu Vodă) Monastery from Bucharest

 This article reconstructs the contribution of Alexandru II Mircea to the formation of the feudal domain of the church he has founded in Bucharest, called the Holy Trinity Monastery. Ensuring a strong economic found...

Perspective de gen în Europa Centrală după 1989: Statutul femeilor din Bosnia-Herţegovina în perioada comunistă şi post-comunistă / Gender perspectives in Central Europe after 1989:Women’s status in Bosnia and Herzegovina during the Communist and post-Communist period

The political and historical backgrounds in the countries that had to do with a Communist regime is very different in terms of previous government forms and gender politics. Historically, the Soviet Union created a socia...

Download PDF file
  • EP ID EP122108
  • DOI -
  • Views 68
  • Downloads 0

How To Cite

Corina Buţea (2014). [b] The idea of queuing in the memorialistic literature[/b]. STUDIUM - Revista studenţilor, masteranzilor şi doctoranzilor în istorie, 7(7), 57-68. https://europub.co.uk/articles/-A-122108