When promises reach boundaries: political participation in post-communist countries

ABSTRACT Political participation increased and diversified in the post-communist world in the last decade. This may create great expectations in terms of societal impact. This Special Section seeks to understand the complexity of this picture by analyzing instances in which the promises of political participation reach boundaries in post-communist countries. It aims to achieve two theoretical and empirical objectives. It outlines several theoretical frameworks that can be used to understand who participates and why they do so, and to identify and explain various ways in which individuals engage in politics, what are their reasons and with what expectations. The articles in this Special Section cover a range of post-communist countries in the form of comparative perspectives across countries with contextualized case studies (Bosnia and Herzegovina, Bulgaria, Georgia and Hungary) and use both qualitative and quantitative analyses.

[1]  Tengiz Sultanishvil Shortfalls of deliberative democracy in Georgia: the analysis of the General Assembly of a Settlement , 2023, European Societies.

[2]  V. Tuzov,et al.  Striving towards democracy? Political participation in post-Soviet countries , 2022, European Politics and Society.

[3]  A. Dimitrova Battered by Geopolitical Winds, Bulgaria Struggles to Restart Much Needed Reforms , 2022, JCMS: Journal of Common Market Studies.

[4]  The Oxford Handbook of Political Participation , 2022 .

[5]  Maja Savić-Bojanić Why small ethnic minorities participate in politics: comparing Jews and Poles in Bosnia and Herzegovina , 2022, European Societies.

[6]  Gabriella Kiss,et al.  More than just an experiment? Politicians arguments behind introducing participatory budgeting in Budapest , 2021, Acta Politica.

[7]  Sergiu Gherghina,et al.  Ecology Projects and Participatory Budgeting: Enhancing Citizens’ Support , 2021, Sustainability.

[8]  M. Bakardjieva The other civil society: digital media and grassroots illiberalism in Bulgaria , 2021, European Societies.

[9]  P. Tap,et al.  Moving online: political parties and the internal use of digital tools in Hungary , 2021, European Societies.

[10]  Sergiu Gherghina,et al.  Sustainability and Politics: Explaining the Emergence of the 2020 Budapest Climate Assembly , 2021 .

[11]  M. Gentile Twilight of democracy: the seductive lure of authoritarianism , 2020, Eurasian Geography and Economics.

[12]  M. Bernhard What do we know about civil society and regime change thirty years after 1989? , 2020 .

[13]  J. Pilet,et al.  Enraged, Engaged, or Both? A Study of the Determinants of Support for Consultative vs. Binding Mini-Publics , 2020, Representation.

[14]  Daniele Caramani,et al.  The Technocratic Challenge to Democracy , 2020 .

[15]  Maxwell Woods The light that failed: a reckoning , 2020 .

[16]  P. Brereton,et al.  Ireland’s Citizens’ Assembly on Climate Change: Lessons for Deliberative Public Engagement and Communication , 2020 .

[17]  Brigitte Geißel,et al.  Support for direct and deliberative models of democracy in the UK: understanding the difference , 2020, Political Research Exchange.

[18]  Ulrich Sedelmeier,et al.  The Europeanization of Eastern Europe: the external incentives model revisited , 2020, Journal of European Public Policy.

[19]  T. O'Brien,et al.  Corruption and conflagration: (in)justice and protest in Bucharest after the Colectiv fire , 2020, Urban Geography.

[20]  Dušan Brabec Participatory Budgeting in the Czech Republic between 2014 and 2018 , 2019 .

[21]  Sergiu Gherghina,et al.  Bringing the policy in: a new typology of national referendums , 2019, European Political Science.

[22]  Shinasi A. Rama Who Slew The Dragon?! The Collapse Of Communism, Political Change, And The Student Movement In Albania—A Review Of The Literature , 2019, The End of Communist Rule in Albania.

[23]  Shinasi A. Rama The End of Communist Rule in Albania , 2019 .

[24]  Sergiu Gherghina How Political Parties Use Referendums: An Analytical Framework , 2019, East European Politics and Societies: and Cultures.

[25]  S. Lindberg,et al.  A third wave of autocratization is here: what is new about it? , 2019, Democratization.

[26]  Adrian Schiffbeck Attrition in long-term deliberative processes. The neighbourhood consultative councils in Timisoara , 2018, Democratic Innovations in Central and Eastern Europe.

[27]  D. Volodin Deliberative democracy and trust in political institutions at the local level: evidence from participatory budgeting experiment in Ukraine , 2018, Democratic Innovations in Central and Eastern Europe.

[28]  Sergiu Mişcoiu ‘Never just a local war’: explaining the failure of a mayor’s recall referendum , 2018, Democratic Innovations in Central and Eastern Europe.

[29]  I. Damnjanovic Democratic innovations in Serbia: a misplaced trust in technology , 2018, Democratic Innovations in Central and Eastern Europe.

[30]  Brigitte Geißel,et al.  An Alternative to Representation: Explaining Preferences for Citizens as Political Decision-Makers , 2018, Political Studies Review.

[31]  Alessandro Chiaramonte,et al.  Does the Iron Curtain Still Exist? The Convergence in Electoral Volatility between Eastern and Western Europe , 2018, Government and Opposition.

[32]  Cristian Vaccari,et al.  Digital Political Talk and Political Participation: Comparing Established and Third Wave Democracies , 2018 .

[33]  Yannis Theocharis,et al.  Political Participation in a Changing World: Conceptual and Empirical Challenges in the Study of Citizen Engagement , 2017 .

[34]  Alessandro Chiaramonte,et al.  Party system volatility, regeneration and de-institutionalization in Western Europe (1945–2015) , 2017 .

[35]  Sergiu Gherghina Direct democracy and subjective regime legitimacy in Europe , 2017 .

[36]  Daniele Caramani Will vs. Reason: The Populist and Technocratic Forms of Political Representation and Their Critique to Party Government , 2017, American Political Science Review.

[37]  G. Závecz,et al.  Post-communist societies of Central and Eastern Europe , 2017 .

[38]  Brigitte Geißel,et al.  Linking Democratic Preferences and Political Participation: Evidence from Germany , 2017 .

[39]  J. Navrátil Urban grassroots movements in Central and Eastern Europe , 2017 .

[40]  K. Miklóssy Urban Grassroots Movements in Central and Eastern Europe , 2016 .

[41]  M. Grasso Generations, Political Participation and Social Change in Western Europe , 2016 .

[42]  G. Tóth,et al.  Pro-government demonstrations in Hungary – citizens’ autonomy and the role of the media , 2016 .

[43]  Joakim Ekman,et al.  Challenges and realities of political participation and civic engagement in central and eastern Europe , 2016 .

[44]  G. Pleyers,et al.  Social Movements in Central and Eastern Europe , 2016 .

[45]  Sergiu Gherghina Party Organization and Electoral Volatility in Central and Eastern Europe: Enhancing voter loyalty , 2014 .

[46]  Filip Kostelka The State of Political Participation in Post-Communist Democracies: Low but Surprisingly Little Biased Citizen Engagement , 2014 .

[47]  J. V. Deth A Conceptual Map of Political Participation , 2014 .

[48]  Joshua A. Tucker,et al.  Revisiting Electoral Volatility in Post-Communist Countries: New Data, New Results and New Approaches , 2014 .

[49]  Erik Amnå,et al.  Political participation and civic engagement: Towards a new typology , 2012 .

[50]  P. Norris Democratic Deficit: Critical Citizens Revisited , 2011 .

[51]  Vera Trappmann,et al.  Civil society in Central and Eastern Europe: The ambivalent legacy of accession , 2010 .

[52]  Thad E. Hall,et al.  Internet Voting in Comparative Perspective: The Case of Estonia , 2009, PS: Political Science & Politics.

[53]  Anja Röcke,et al.  Participatory Budgeting in Europe: Potentials and Challenges , 2008 .

[54]  T. Power,et al.  Does Democratization Depress Participation? Voter Turnout in the Latin American and Eastern European Transitional Democracies , 2007 .

[55]  Jan W. van Deth,et al.  Citizenship and involvement in European Democracies : A Comparative Analysis , 2007 .

[56]  Michael Marsh,et al.  Voting and Protesting: Explaining Citizen Participation in Old and New European Democracies , 2007 .

[57]  A. Sikk,et al.  How unstable? Volatility and the genuinely new parties in Eastern Europe , 2005 .

[58]  M. Howard The Weakness of Civil Society in Post-Communist Europe , 2003 .

[59]  C. Mudde,et al.  Uncivil Society? Contentious Politics in Post-Communist Europe , 2003 .