Transcript transtodem
Transition to Democracy
And associated conceptual
frameworks
Interesting articles
Larry Diamond: “Is the Third Wave
over?”
http://muse.jhu.edu/journals/journal_o
f_democracy/v007/7.3/diamond.html
Paul Lewis: “Theories of
Democratisation and Patterns of Regime
Change in Eastern Europe” Journal of
Communist Studies and Transition
Politics Vol13, No1, March1997
R.F.M.Lubbers: “A response to Samuel
Huntington”
http://www.globalize.org.clash.html
Samuel P.Huntington
Three waves of democratization
1828-1926
1943-1964
1974-present
First two ended with a “reverse wave”
Diamond’s Table 1
Year
No.
Democracies
1974
1990
1991
1992
1993
1995
39
76
91
99
108
117
No.
States
142
165
183
186
190
191
Demo as
% of total
27.5
46.1
49.7
53.2
56.8
61.3
Lewis’s groups 1997
Group 1
Hungary
Poland
Czech Republic
Slovenia
Intermediate
Bulgaria
Slovakia
Group 2
Romania
Croatia
Albania
Serbia
Hang on a minute, what about?
Estonia [in first group
of applicant countries]
Lithuania
Latvia
Bosnia
Macedonia
Ukraine
Moldova
Byelarus
Russia
Georgia
Armenia
Azerbaijan
E.U.’s two groups of applicants
Hungary
Poland
Estonia
Czech Republic
Slovenia
Bulgaria
Latvia
Lithuania
Rumania
Slovakia
Cyprus
Turkey
Explanations
Group 2 primarily Ottoman, Group1
Austo-Hungarian/North European
Group 2 Orthodox Christian or Muslim;
Group 1 Catholic or Protestant
such explanations stress cultural and
historical factors
Explanations 2
Group 2 countries had stable communist
rule
Group 1 had history of instability and
ideological revisionism
Elite mass relations very different under
Communist rule
Explanations 3
Civil society strong in group 1 countries
Poland: church
Hungary: dissident elections and early
political parties
Czechs; artists
East Germany: Lutheran peace groups
Slovenia; punks and youth groups
More on Civil society
Revolts: GDR 1953; Hungary Poland
1956; Czechoslovakia 1968; Poland 19801
pluralism developed as leadership
retreated during 1980s
So civil society began to organise itself
pre-1989
Explanations 4
Group 1 communist regimes modes of exit
involved social movements that negotiated
elections [Poland, Hungary,
Czechoslovakia]
Group 2 exit by coup or elite reshuffle;
pace of democratisation delayed
Explanations 5
Modernization and socio-economic
development higher in Group 1
GDP per capita higher
urbanisation higher
% working in agriculture lower
Debate:
Modernisation v Elite Choice
Lipset
Dahl
Huntington
Pye
O’Donnell and
Schmitter
Przeworski
Bova
von Beyme
Welsh