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The European Bibliography of Slavic and East European Studies (EBSEES) - 1991-2007

The European Bibliography of Slavic and East European Studies (EBSEES) collects books, journal articles, reviews and dissertations from Eastern Europe (former countries of Eastern Bloc) which were published in Belgium, Germany, Finland, France, Great Britain, the Netherlands, Austria and Switzerland from 1991 to 2007. The segment "Literature" and "Culture" of the European Bibliography of Slavic and East European Studies contains 18.000 bibliographic entries (from the total asset of 85.000). More information can be found here.

ID103848
Author(s)Lewis, Paul G
Title

The 'Third Wave' of Democracy in Eastern Europe: Comparative Perspectives on Party Roles and Political Development

PublishedParty Politics 7, 2001, pp. 543-566
Language(s)English
ISSN1354-0688
SubjectsEastern Europe / Political Parties  [Browse all]
Eastern Europe / Democratization  [Browse all]
Note"Political parties were not generally major actors in the early stages of democratization in eastern Europe, and their role has been a highly central but limited one in the politics of the region overall. How different has east European democratization been from earlier cases in this respect and how far has the contribution made by parties to the process changed? Their role is first examined in the framework of the 'three waves of democracy' that developed in different historical and international contexts. Contemporary east European democratization is indeed closer to the patterns of the 'second wave' than to the 'first wave' democratizations of western Europe, to which the classic models of party development are closely related. Recent developments in eastern Europe and the role played by parties are then analysed in terms of the major political challenges identifed by proponents of the political development school, whose work concerned large areas covered by the 'second wave'. In comparison with earlier phases, the role of parties in east European democratization is relatively limited and dependent on the prior management of major conflict tendencies. Rather than participation and integration, parties are more critically concerned with the establishment of legitimacy in the more rapidly consolidating democracies. "
Mediumarticle
Holdings (in Germany)ZDB-Katalog
PURLCitation link

More like this:

Democratization and party development in Eastern Europe / Lewis, Paul G.
Poland and Eastern Europe: perspectives on party factions and factionalism / Lewis, Paul G.
Political institutionalisation and party development in post-communist Poland / Lewis, Paul G.
Political parties in post-communist Eastern Europe / Lewis, Paul G.
Transitions to democracy : comparative perspectives from Southern Europe, Latin America and Eastern Europe
Civil society and the development of political parties in East-Central Europe / Lewis, Paul
Political authority and Party secretaries in Poland 1975-1986 / Lewis, Paul G.