Developments in East European PoliticsStephen White, Judy Batt, Paul G. Lewis Duke University Press, 1993 - 304 pages Formerly a part of the Soviet empire, the countries of Central and Eastern Europe are now in the process of a complex transition from authoritarianism to more open systems based on political democracy and the market. Developments in East European Politics takes as its starting point the dramatic developments of the late 1980s and early 1990s and the factors that have helped to shape the region as a whole, focusing in detail on the changing politics of Poland, Hungary, Bulgaria and the successor republics in the former Yugoslavia and Czechoslovakia. At the core of the book is a set of comparative chapters considering developments in voting behaviour, the emerging party systems, political leadership and participation, economic reform and social policy in Eastern Europe. The volume concludes with an assessment of the political science of post-communist Eastern Europe, a consideration of its place in the wider world and a presentation of selected voices of the people of Eastern Europe themselves. Written by leading specialists from both sides of the Atlantic, this introductory but authoritative text provides an up-to-date and unrivalled guide to the forces that are reshaping half a continent. |
From inside the book
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Page 103
... leaders were disorganised and lacked unity of purpose . Distrust among them was high and became institutionalised through the notion of collective leadership . The economic and cultural elites were alienated from the new leaders and ...
... leaders were disorganised and lacked unity of purpose . Distrust among them was high and became institutionalised through the notion of collective leadership . The economic and cultural elites were alienated from the new leaders and ...
Page 163
... leadership choice , and ( ii ) control of or submission to executive prerogatives , that marks the boundary between democratic and undemocratic leadership . As in such other political spheres as electoral systems and party formation ...
... leadership choice , and ( ii ) control of or submission to executive prerogatives , that marks the boundary between democratic and undemocratic leadership . As in such other political spheres as electoral systems and party formation ...
Page 169
... leadership and reveal distinctive pat- terns that have emerged . New Leaders in Eastern Europe Given the institutional choices faced by the polities of contemporary Eastern Europe , how have individual countries chosen their leaders ...
... leadership and reveal distinctive pat- terns that have emerged . New Leaders in Eastern Europe Given the institutional choices faced by the polities of contemporary Eastern Europe , how have individual countries chosen their leaders ...
Contents
Eastern Europe after Communism Stephen White 2372 | 2 |
Culture and Identity in PostCommunist Europe | 16 |
X3 Poland David S Mason | 36 |
Copyright | |
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Developments in East European Politics Stephen White,Judy Batt,Paul G. Lewis No preview available - 1993 |
Common terms and phrases
1992 elections Albania Alliance Bulgaria Bulgarian Socialist Party candidates cent Christian Democratic Civic Democratic Civic Democratic Party Civic Forum civil society collapse communism Communist Party communist period communist regimes communist rule comparative politics constitutional Croatia cultural Czech Republic Czechoslovakia democracy Democratic Party dissident East European East-Central Europe Eastern Europe economic reform electoral emerged enterprises ethnic European countries forces former communist German groups Havel Hungarian Hungary ideological independent initial institutions issues leaders leadership majority market economy Mazowiecki ment Milosevic movement nationalist negotiations nomenklatura opposition organisation parliament parliamentary elections Poland Polish popular population post-communist President Prime Minister privatisation problems programme Public Against Violence region role Romania seats sector Sejm Serbian Slovakia Slovenia Social Democratic social policy Socialist Party Solidarity Soviet Union structures tion Tito's transformation unemployment Vaclav vote Walesa Western women workers Yugoslav Yugoslavia Zhelev Zhivkov