Publication

2016 - Taylor & Francis Group

Language

English

Word Count

59,500 words, Guess

Page Count

238 pages

Identifiers

  • ISBN-139781138673823
  • ISBN-10113867382X
  • Library of Congress Control Number2016013478
  • OCLC Control Number960041057
  • OCLC Control Number943700962
and 2 more
  • Better World Books9781138673823
  • Open LibraryOL28805231M

Classifications

  • LCCJC423.D47834 2016
  • LCCJC423 .D47834 2017eb
  • LCCJC423 .D47834 2017

Description

The 2010’s was a critical period in the continuing, established trend of the spread of democracy worldwide: from the Arab Spring countries of Tunisia, Libya, Egypt and Yemen to the unfolding turmoil of Myanmar and Ukraine, by way of the upheavals in Burkina Faso, Senegal and Ivory Coast, social mobilisation against autocratic, corrupt, or military regimes has precipitated political transitions that are characteristic of "democratisation." This book examines the state of democratisation theory and practice that reopens and revives the democratic transition debate, exploring the factors that lead to the demise of autocracy, the pathways and processes of change, and the choice for an eventual consolidation of democracy. For all its insights and shortcomings, the framework of transitology – a body of literature that has comparatively and through case-study analysis, examined common patterns, sequences, crises and outcomes of transitional periods – has been largely eschewed. The essays, written by international democratisation specialists, tackle the series of questions raised by a body of literature that remains highly useful to understand contemporary political turbulence and transformation, considering numerous crucial issues. This work will be of key interest to scholars, students and practitioners of governance, democratisation, comparative politics, international relations, political science and more broadly, history. --

Subjects

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