Building Trust and Democracy

Building Trust and Democracy
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Transitional Justice in Post-Communist Countries
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Artikel-Nr:
9780198793328
Veröffentl:
2017
Erscheinungsdatum:
04.07.2017
Seiten:
400
Autor:
Cynthia M Horne
Gewicht:
676 g
Format:
236x155x25 mm
Sprache:
Englisch
Beschreibung:

Cynthia M. Horne is Professor of Political Science at Western Washington University. Her recent research has focused on assessing the impact of transitional justice measures on trust-building, societal reconciliation and democratization in the post-communist transitions. Her articles have appeared in peer reviewed journals, such as the International Journal of Transitional Justice, Comparative Political Studies, Problems of Post-Communism, Law & Social Inquiry, and Europe-Asia Studies.

This volume explores the effects of transitional justice measures on trust-building and democratization across twelve countries in Central and Eastern Europe and parts of the Former Soviet Union over the period 19892012.
The author argues that transitional justice measures have a differentiated impact on political and social trust-building, supporting some aspects of political trust and undermining other aspects of social trust. Moreover, the structure, scope, timing, and implementation of transitional justice measures condition outcomes. More expansive and compulsory institutional change mechanisms register the largest effects, with limited and voluntary change mechanisms having a diminished effect, and more informal and largely symbolic measures having the most attenuated effect. These differentiated and conditional effects are also evident with respect to transition goals like supporting democratic consolidation and reducing corruption, since these goals respond differently to the mixtures of institutional and symbolic reforms found in transitional justice programs.
The author develops an original transitional justice typology in order to test hypotheses linking trust-building and transitional justice across twelve cases in the post-communist region. The resulting new datasets allow for a quantitative examination of the relationship between different types of transitional justice programs and a range of possible state building and societal reconciliation goals, including political trust-building, social trust-building, democratization, the strengthening of civil society, the promotion of government effectiveness, and the reduction of corruption. Comparative case studies of four transitional justice programs-Hungary, Romania, Poland, and Bulgariadraw on field work, primary and historical documents, and interview materials to explicate trust-building dynamics, with particular attention to regime complicity challenges, historical memory issues, and communist legacies.
Oxford Studies in Democratization is a series for scholars and students of comparative politics and related disciplines. Volumes concentrate on the comparative study of the democratization process that accompanied the decline and termination of the cold war. The geographical focus of the series is primarily Latin America, the Caribbean, Southern and Eastern Europe, and relevant experiences in Africa and Asia. The series editor is Laurence Whitehead, Senior Research Fellow, Nuffield College, University of Oxford.
This volume examines the conditions under which lustration and related transitional justice measures have affected political and social trust-building and democratization across twelve countries in Central and Eastern Europe and parts of the Former Soviet Union between 1989 and 2012.
  • Introduction

  • 1: Trust and Transitional Justice

  • 2: Classifying Countries Within the Transitional Justice Typology

  • 3: Building Trust in Public Institutions

  • 4: Trust in Government and Government Effectiveness

  • 5: Collaboration, Complicity, and Historical Memory

  • 6: Lustration, Public Disclosures, and Social Trust

  • 7: Transitional Justice in Support of Democratization

  • 8: Conclusion: Evaluating Post-Communist Transitional Justice

  • Appendix 1: Lustration, Public Disclosure, and File Access Laws and Policies

  • Appendix 2: Timeline of Regional Transitional Justice and Lustration Programs (1990-2012)

  • Appendix 3: Data Sources and Transformations

  • Appendix 4: Replications

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