In the early 1990s consolidation was the key term and conceptual frame in the democratization theories of the East Central European (ECE) states. However, this concept has been more and more questioned and finally rejected by the 2010s and the term deconsolidation has been introduced instead. Nowadays, there is an age of uncertainty in democracy studies that necessitates the reconceptualization of both European studies and democratic theory. In the recent deconsolidation process the trend towards ‘transitions to authoritarian rule’ has been observed in the ECE states in general and in Poland and Hungary in particular, where state capture has been extended to full-fledged ‘democracy capture’. Poland and Hungary will serve in this chapter as exemplary cases of deconsolidation of democracy.
Deconsolidation of Democracy in East Central Europe
Published 2019 in The Handbook of Political, Social, and Economic Transformation
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2019
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The Handbook of Political, Social, and Economic Transformation
- Publication date
2019-02-13
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Political Science
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Semantic Scholar
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