The irregular pendulum of democracy : populism, clientelism and corruption in post-Yugoslav successor states

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The irregular pendulum of democracy : populism, clientelism and corruption in post-Yugoslav successor states

Dimitri A. Sotiropoulos

(New perspectives on South-East Europe)

Palgrave Macmillan, c2023

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Description and Table of Contents

Description

This book argues that the backsliding or stagnation of democracy should be interpreted in a wider perspective on irregular movements towards and away from contemporary liberal democracy. This a perspective couched by a metaphor, namely the 'pendulum of democracy', which the author has constructed to suggest that democratic regimes may swing between a democratic end (fully developed liberal democracy) and a semi-authoritarian end (competitive authoritarianism). The pendulum does not have a predictable frequency. Democratization may lead to irregular movements back and forth. It is easier to analyze such movements of the pendulum when democracy is not consolidated yet (for instance, in the three post-Yugoslav political regimes mentioned above), as democratic institutions and processes are not yet stable. For this reason, this book analyses the swing of unconsolidated democracy away from the democratic end in the cases of today's Serbia and Montenegro and the swing back towards liberal democracy in the case of North Macedonia which - until 2017 - had been developing into a competitive authoritarian regime, but then embarked on the road to democratic recovery.

Table of Contents

1. Introduction 2. Populism, Clientelism and Corruption and the International Crisis of Democracy 3. The Pendulum of Democracy in Post-Yugoslav Successor States: Causes of the Backsliding of Democracy 4. Economy, Culture and Party System: Preconditions for State-Society Relations Eroding Democracy 5. Populism as a Type of State-Society Relations Eroding Democracy 6. Political clientelism as a Type of State-Society Relations Eroding Democracy 7. Political corruption as a Type of State-Society Relations Eroding Democracy 8. How Elected Governments Make Democracies Backslide: the Case of Serbia 9. How Elected Governments Make Democracies Backslide: the Case of Montenegro 10. How Elected Governments Make Democracies Backslide: the case of North Macedonia 11. Prolonging or Halting Democratic Erosion in Serbia, Montenegro and North Macedonia: a Comparison 12. Conclusions

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