After Communism: Perspectives on Democracy (p)Donald R. Kelley University of Arkansas Press, 2003 - 304 pages |
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Page 8
... models of the world's older democracies and creating ancillary structures such as parties and interest groups from the same mold . Perhaps because of these ambiguities , the notion of consolidation 8 Donald R. Kelley.
... models of the world's older democracies and creating ancillary structures such as parties and interest groups from the same mold . Perhaps because of these ambiguities , the notion of consolidation 8 Donald R. Kelley.
Page 9
... groups that are not directly accountable to the electorate ; ⚫both the " vertical accountability " of officials to ... group freedoms.8 As the list continues to grow , an important caveat seems in order . Any assessment of the ...
... groups that are not directly accountable to the electorate ; ⚫both the " vertical accountability " of officials to ... group freedoms.8 As the list continues to grow , an important caveat seems in order . Any assessment of the ...
Page 14
... groups and associations that structure and define the political identity of citi- zens as well as provide intermediate mechanisms that link them to more explicitly political institutions . In most societies , such groups and associa ...
... groups and associations that structure and define the political identity of citi- zens as well as provide intermediate mechanisms that link them to more explicitly political institutions . In most societies , such groups and associa ...
Page 15
... groups struc- ture at least a part of citizens ' political involvement , especially to the extent that political parties ( which belong in the " political society " examined below ) are broader coalitions of diverse interests . Just as ...
... groups struc- ture at least a part of citizens ' political involvement , especially to the extent that political parties ( which belong in the " political society " examined below ) are broader coalitions of diverse interests . Just as ...
Page 16
... groups and associations and establish the legal framework required for their operation , they must eschew the ... groups cannot substitute for coherent political parties with broad and relatively enduring bases of popular support ...
... groups and associations and establish the legal framework required for their operation , they must eschew the ... groups cannot substitute for coherent political parties with broad and relatively enduring bases of popular support ...
Contents
1 | |
7 | |
31 | |
A Decade of Change but Not Much Progress | 61 |
Taming Vlast | 89 |
Social Relations and Political Practices in PostCommunist Russia | 119 |
Russia in the Middle State Building and the Rule of Law | 143 |
Democracy and Counterinsurgency in Central Asia | 161 |
Institutionalizing Electoral Democracy in PostCommunist States | 187 |
A Decade of Nonnationalism? Regime Change As Surrogate for Identity Change | 221 |
Consolidation As a Work in Progress | 239 |
Notes | 253 |
Contributors | 295 |
Index | 297 |
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Common terms and phrases
Adam Przeworski Afghanistan argued Asian authoritarian Boris Yeltsin Cambridge University Press Central Asia Chechen citizens civil society collapse communist competition consolidation constitutional context corruption countries created creation Croatia cultural decade decree power democratic democratic politics Duma Duma's Eastern Europe effective elec electoral democracy elites emerged empire ENEP Estonia ethnic Europe-Asia Studies European example executive Federation Council formal former Soviet founding elections Gorbachev identity important independence institutionalization issue Kazakhstan Kyrgyzstan Latin American leaders legislation legislature majority market economy nationalist nations officials opposition organizations outcomes parliament parliamentary participation party regimes party systems pattern percent Poland political actors political parties Polyarchy post-communism post-communist Post-Soviet power networks practices president presidential Putin region republics Richard Rose Russia Barometer Russian Federation Slovakia social Soviet Union stability structure Studies Tajikistan Taliban tion transition Turkmenistan USSR Uzbekistan veto Vladimir Vladimir Putin vlast volatility vote voters Yeltsin
Popular passages
Page 8 - And we define: the democratic method is that institutional arrangement for arriving at political decisions in which individuals acquire the power to decide by means of a competitive struggle for the people's vote.
Page 258 - Benedict Anderson, Imagined Communities: Reflections on the Origins and Spread of Nationalism (London: Verso, 1983); Eric Hobsbawm and Terence Ranger, eds., The Invention of Tradition (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1983).
Page 82 - Russians a strong state is not an anomaly which should be got rid of. Quite the contrary, they see it as a source and guarantor of order and the initiator and main driving force of any change.
Page 14 - Civil society is conceived here as the realm of organized social life that is voluntary, self-generating, ˇlargely} self-supporting, autonomous from the state, and bound by a legal order or set of shared rules.
Page 7 - Behaviorally, a democratic regime in a territory is consolidated when no significant national, social, economic, political, or institutional actors spend significant resources attempting to achieve their objectives by creating a nondemocratic regime or by seceding from the state.
Page 125 - The precise specification of space and function that characterize modern institutions, the coordination of these functions into hierarchical arrangements, the organization of supervision and surveillance, the marking out of time into schedules and programs, all contribute to constructing a world that appears to consist not of a complex of social practices but of a binary order: on the one hand individuals and their activities, on the other an inert "structure" that somehow stands apart from individuals,...
Page 10 - political culture" thus refers to the specifically political orientations — attitudes toward the political system and its various parts, and attitudes toward the role of the self in the system.
Page 288 - Uncertainty in the Transition: Post-Communism in Hungary," East European Politics and Societies 1 (Spring 1993), 240-75.
Page 262 - State power in the Russian Federation is exercised on the basis of the separation of legislative, executive and judicial powers. Bodies of legislative, executive and judicial power are independent.