1st Edition

The Quality of Democracy in Post-Communist Europe

Edited By DEREK HUTCHESON, Elena A. Korosteleva Copyright 2006
    178 Pages
    by Routledge

    178 Pages
    by Routledge

    The countries of the former Eastern Bloc and Soviet Union have exhibited remarkable diversity in their post-communist regime paths. Whereas some states have become demonstrably more democratic and have moved in the space of fifteen years from the periphery to the centre of European politics, in others the political and economic climates seem hardly to be better, and their societies no more free, than in the final years of the Cold War.

    Assessing progress towards democracy in the former Eastern Bloc - or the lack of it - requires a qualitative examination of post-communist polities. This collection of articles brings together a number of perspectives, both macro and micro-analytical, on the 'quality' of democracy in post-communist Europe.

    This volume was previously published as a special issue of the Journal of Communist Studies and Transition Politics.

    Preface  1. 'Good' and 'Bad' Democracies: How to conduct research into the quality of democracy  2. The Quality of Democracies in Europe as Measured by Current Indicators of Democratization and Good Governance  3. The Misuse of Referenda in Post-Communist Europe  4. Dimensions of Disengagement in Post-Communist Russia  5. Disengaged or Disenchanted?: The vote 'against all' in post-communist Russia  6. The Quality of Democracy in Belarus and Ukraine  7. The Sources and Dynamics of Competitive Authoritarianism in Ukraine  Conclusion: Democracy in Post-Communist Europe: Fifteen years on

    Biography

    DEREK HUTCHESON, Elena A. Korosteleva