Eastern Europe



"In Eastern Europe, it is a nest of communism, and is famous for the Warsaw Pact as well. Since the golden days of communism are all but ended when the 1989 revolutions turned these communist regimes into democracies. Now there's a New Warsaw Pact coming on soon, I think."

--Su Ji-Hoon, Ukraine's Doomsday

Eastern Europe is the eastern part of the European continent. There is no consensus on the precise area it covers, partly because the term has a wide range of geopolitical, geographical, cultural, and socioeconomic connotations. There are "almost as many definitions of Eastern Europe as there are scholars of the region." A related United Nations paper adds that "every assessment of spatial identities is essentially a social and cultural construct."

One definition describes Eastern Europe as a cultural entity: the region lying in Europe with the main characteristics consisting of Greek, Byzantine, Eastern Orthodox, Russian, and some Ottoman culture influences. Another definition was created during the Cold War and used more or less synonymously with the term Eastern Bloc. A similar definition names the formerly communist European states outside the Soviet Union as Eastern Europe. Some historians and social scientists view such definitions as outdated or relegated, but they are still sometimes used for statistical purposes.