After Communism: Perspectives on Democracy (p)

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Donald R. Kelley
University of Arkansas Press, 2003 - 304 ˹éÒ
 

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What Is to Be Done?
1
The Complexity of Democratic Consolidation
7
Comparative Democratization
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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˹éÒ 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.
˹éÒ 14 - Civil society is conceived here as the realm of organized social life that is voluntary, self-generating, ¡largely} self-supporting, autonomous from the state, and bound by a legal order or set of shared rules.
˹éÒ 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.
˹éÒ 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.

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