Hostname: page-component-848d4c4894-2pzkn Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-05-28T19:24:16.170Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

Must Eastern Europe follow the Latin American way?

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  28 July 2009

Get access

Extract

Almost a decade after the wave of transformations from authoritarian to democratic regimes started in Latin America, Eastern European countries, one after another, entered the path leading towards democracy. The end of 1989 and the first part of 1990 saw unheard of numbers of free elections in ten Latin American and all East European countries (with the exception of Poland, where freedom of the first election was limited). Moreover, all the newly elected rulers won office on a promise to liberalise their economies. However, many commentators and scholars fear the impact on populations of painful structural reform policies and predict that new democracies in both regions either will not stay democratic for long or will not carry out a full package of economic reforms. They predict that half-hearted efforts at stabilisation will be followed by overwhelming political resistance which will provoke a reversal of economic policies. Each failure will reduce the credibility of successive reform attempts, the ultimate consequence being not merely economic disarray but an almost total loss of faith in democratic political institutions.

Type
Society and democracy in Eastern Europe
Copyright
Copyright © Archives Européenes de Sociology 1992

Access options

Get access to the full version of this content by using one of the access options below. (Log in options will check for institutional or personal access. Content may require purchase if you do not have access.)

References

BIBLIOGRAPHY

Aho, M. C. and Stokes, B. 1991, The year the world economy turned, Foreign Affairs, 70, 1: 160178.Google Scholar
Ash, T. G. 1990, Eastern Europe: Après le déluge, nous, The New York Review, 08 16: 5158.Google Scholar
Bartolini, S. and Mair, P. 1990, Identity, Competition, and Electoral Availability (Cambridge, Cambridge University Press).Google Scholar
Booth, J. A. 1989, Costa Rica: the roots of democratic stability, in Diamond, L., Linz, J. J. and Lipset, S. M. (eds), Democracy. Latin America (Boulder, Lynne Rienner Publishers).Google Scholar
Callghy, T. M. 1989, Towards State Capability and Embedded Liberalism, in Neslon, J. M. (ed.), Fragile Coalitions (Washington, Transaction Books).Google Scholar
Cohen, Y. 1987, Democracy from above: the political origins of military dictatorship in Brazil, World Politics, XL, 1: 3055.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Dahl, R. 1971, Polyarchy; Participation and Opposition (New Haven, CT, Yale University Press).Google Scholar
Dahrendorf, R. 1990, Transitions: politics, economics, and liberty, The Washington Quartely, Summer: 133142.Google Scholar
Diamond, L., Linz, J. J. and Lipset, S. M. (eds) 1989, Democracy. Latin America (Boulder, Lynne Rienner Publishers).Google Scholar
Diamond, L. and Linz, J. J. 1989, Introduction: politics, society, and democracy in Latin America, in Diamond, Linz, Lipset, Democracy, op. cit.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Elster, J. 1990, When communism dissolves, London Review of Books, 01 25: 5.Google Scholar
Fishlow, A. 1986, The East European debt crisis in the Latin America mirror, International Organisation, 40, 2, Spring.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Fralon, J. A. 1991, Wide disenchantment with Hungary new freedom, Guardian Weekly, June 16: 15.Google Scholar
Gillespie, C. G. and Gonzales, L. E. 1989, Uruguay: the survival of old and autonomous institutions, in Diamond, Linz, Lipset, Democracy, op. cit.Google Scholar
Goodell, G. 1985, The importance of political participation for sustained capitalist development, Archives européennes de sociologie, XXVI: 93127.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Hagopian, F. 1990, Democracy by undemocratic means? Comparative Political Studies, 23, 2: 147170.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Haggard, S. and Kaufman, R. R. 1989, Economic Adjustment in New Democracies, in Nelson, J. M. (ed.), Fragile Coalitions (Washington, Transaction Books).Google Scholar
Heller, A. 1988, On Formal Democracy, in Keane, J. (ed.), Civil Society and the State (London, Verso).Google Scholar
Huntington, S. P. 1984, Will more countries become democratic? Political Science Quartely, 99, 2: 193218.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Kliamkin, I. 1990, Democrats must take a stand, Telos, 84, 132137.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Kolarska-Bobinska, L. 1990, Civil society and social anomy in Poland, Acta Sociologica, 33, 4: 277288.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Kozak, M. 1991, Social support for privatisation in Poland, Communist Economies and Economic Transformation, 3, 2: 155167.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Lamounier, B. 1989, Brazil: inequality against Democracy, in Diamond, Linz, Lipset, Democracy, op. cit.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Lane, L. E. and Ersson, S. 1987, Politics and Society in Western Europe (London, Sage).Google Scholar
Lijphart, A. 1990, The Southern European examples of democratization, Government and Opposition, 25, 1, Winter: 68114.Google Scholar
Linz, J. J. 1990, Zagrozenie systemu prczydenckiego, Res Publica, 4, 12: 3149.Google Scholar
Linz, J. J. 1978, The Breakdown of Democratic Regimes (Baltimore, Johns Hopkins University Press).Google Scholar
Misztal, B. A. 1991, AIDS in Poland: a society in need of the state, European Social Policy, vol. 2.Google Scholar
Misztal, B. A. 1990, The exhaustion and transformation of state socialism, Thesis Eleven, 27, 63: 82.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Nelson, J. M. 1987, Political participation, in Weiner, M. and Huntington, S. P. (eds), Understanding Political Development (Glenview, Scott Foresman).Google Scholar
O'Donnell, G., Schmitter, P. C. and Whitehead, L. (eds) 1986, Transitions from Authoritarian Rule (Baltimore, The J. Hopkins University Press).Google Scholar
Pagden, A. 1991, Basismo, London Review of Books, 06 13: 27.Google Scholar
Popov, G. 1990, Dangers of democracy, The New York Review, 08 26: 2728.Google Scholar
Przeworski, A. 1991, The ‘East’ becomes the ‘South’? Political Science and Politics, XXIV, 1:2024.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Remmer, K. 1990, Democracy and economic crisis: the Latin American experience, World Politics, XLII, 3: 315335.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Roniger, L. 1989, Democratic transitions and consolidation in contemporary Southern Europe and Latin America, International Journal of Comparative Sociology, XXX, 34: 216–29.Google Scholar
Rustow, D. A. 1990, Democracy: a global revolution? Foreign Affairs, 69, 4: 7591.Google Scholar
Rustow, D. A. 1970, Transition to democracy: towards a dynamic model, Comparative Politics, 2: 337.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Seligson, M. A. and Muller, E. N. 1987, Democratic stability and economic crisis, International Studies Quartely, 31: 323.Google Scholar
Sloan, J. and Tedin, K. T., 1987, The consequences of regime type for public-policy output, Comparative Political Studies, 20, 1: 98123.Google Scholar
Stephens, E. H. 1989, Capitalist development and democracy in South America, Politics and Society, 17, 3: 281352.Google Scholar
Szelenyi, I. 1988, Socialist entrepreneurs (Madison, University of Winsconsin Press).Google Scholar
Turner, B. 1990, Outline of theory of citizenship, Sociology, 24, 2: 189217.Google Scholar
Valenzuela, A. 1989, Chile: Origins, consolidations, and breakdown of a democratic regime, in Diamond, Linz and Lipset, Democracy, op. cit.Google Scholar
Wiarda, H. J. 1990, The Democratic Revollution in Latin America (New York, Holmes & Meier).Google Scholar
Wolf, M. 1991, Poland's struggle for stability, Financial Times, 05 9.Google Scholar