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OverviewFull Product DetailsAuthor: Andrew Roberts (Northwestern University, Illinois)Publisher: Cambridge University Press Imprint: Cambridge University Press Dimensions: Width: 15.60cm , Height: 1.40cm , Length: 23.40cm Weight: 0.390kg ISBN: 9781107417571ISBN 10: 1107417570 Pages: 252 Publication Date: 11 September 2014 Audience: Professional and scholarly , Professional and scholarly , Professional & Vocational , Professional & Vocational Format: Paperback Publisher's Status: Active Availability: Manufactured on demand We will order this item for you from a manufactured on demand supplier. Table of ContentsReviewsWhat is the quality of democracy in postcommunist East Central Europe? In this provocative and intriguing analysis, Andrew Roberts finds surprising answers to this important question and demonstrates how these countries overcame both the legacies of authoritarian rule and the challenges of regime transformation. - Anna Grzymala-Busse, University of Michigan Roberts has produced a fascinating study of democratic quality in Central and Eastern Europe. The rise of postcommunist Central European states to the top ranks of world democracies has been nothing short of remarkable. But how substantial is this democracy? Roberts shows that by measures of electoral accountability, mandate responsiveness, and policy responsiveness, Central European countries do quite well. Central European voters punish incumbents and are consulted or included in policy making. Most interestingly, Roberts persuasively identifies a cause for the surprisingly high quality of postcommunist democracy: socioeconomic modernization. Despite, or perhaps because of, communism, Central Europe has a highly 'educated, relatively egalitarian, middle-class society' that demands - and gets - representation. - Mitchell A. Orenstein, Johns Hopkins University Few works in comparative politics consider the normative foundations of democracy. In this remarkable book, Roberts develops a rigorous conceptual basis for the idea of democratic quality, defined in terms of citizen rule. Drawing on multiple and diverse data sources, Roberts applies a sophisticated conceptual framework to the young democracies of postcommunist Europe, challenging the common presumption that they are of lower quality than established democracies. Instead, as rigorous statistical analysis and in-depth case studies show, citizen rule may even be more salient in these and other new democracies. This important study offers a clear, comprehensive, and theoretically informed account of the state of democracy in Eastern Europe 20 years after the demise of communism. It is required reading not only for comparativists already interested in the region but also for all scholars of democratic politics. - Anna Seleny, Tufts University In this outstanding and timely book, Roberts makes a groundbreaking contribution: He brings conceptual clarity and methodological rigor to the study of the quality of democracy. For Roberts, linkages between citizens and policy-makers determine democratic quality; he shows us how to measure these linkages using quantitative and qualitative methods. In the East European cases this yields an important result: these new democracies are relatively robust. - Milada Anna Vachudova, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill What is the quality of democracy in postcommunist East Central Europe? In this provocative and intriguing analysis, Andrew Roberts finds surprising answers to this important question and demonstrates how these countries overcame both the legacies of authoritarian rule and the challenges of regime transformation. - Anna Grzymala-Busse, University of Michigan Roberts has produced a fascinating study of democratic quality in Central and Eastern Europe. The rise of postcommunist Central European states to the top ranks of world democracies has been nothing short of remarkable. But how substantial is this democracy? Roberts shows that by measures of electoral accountability, mandate responsiveness, and policy responsiveness, Central European countries do quite well. Central European voters punish incumbents and are consulted or included in policy making. Most interestingly, Roberts persuasively identifies a cause for the surprisingly high quality of postcommunist democracy: socioeconomic modernization. Despite, or perhaps because of, communism, Central Europe has a highly `educated, relatively egalitarian, middle-class society' that demands - and gets - representation. - Mitchell A. Orenstein, Johns Hopkins University Few works in comparative politics consider the normative foundations of democracy. In this remarkable book, Roberts develops a rigorous conceptual basis for the idea of democratic quality, defined in terms of citizen rule. Drawing on multiple and diverse data sources, Roberts applies a sophisticated conceptual framework to the young democracies of postcommunist Europe, challenging the common presumption that they are of lower quality than established democracies. Instead, as rigorous statistical analysis and in-depth case studies show, citizen rule may even be more salient in these and other new democracies. This important study offers a clear, comprehensive, and theoretically informed account of the state of democracy in Eastern Europe 20 years after the demise of communism. It is required reading not only for comparativists already interested in the region but also for all scholars of democratic politics. - Anna Seleny, Tufts University In this outstanding and timely book, Roberts makes a groundbreaking contribution: He brings conceptual clarity and methodological rigor to the study of the quality of democracy. For Roberts, linkages between citizens and policy-makers determine democratic quality; he shows us how to measure these linkages using quantitative and qualitative methods. In the East European cases this yields an important result: these new democracies are relatively robust. - Milada Anna Vachudova, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill Author InformationAndrew Roberts is currently Assistant Professor of Political Science at Northwestern University and a Fellow at the Institute for Policy Research. He is the author of From Good King Wenceslas to the Good Soldier Švejk: A Dictionary of Czech Popular Culture (2005) and has published articles in numerous journals, including Comparative Politics, Legislative Studies Quarterly, Electoral Studies, Party Politics, Slavic Review, the Journal of Public Policy, and East European Politics and Societies. Tab Content 6Author Website:Countries AvailableAll regions |