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Politics and Democracy in Ukraine
This chapter will first look at the political legacy of Yushchenko’s presidency that prepared ground for an authoritarian revival. It will then analyze key political reversals under Yanukovych focusing on the closure of main arenas for political contestation and enhanced capacity of the new authorities to neutralize civil society mobilization. The chapter will conclude by outlining a set of recommendations on how to deter Ukraine from turning into a full-blown authoritarian regime and promote its greater political openness.
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The 2012 Parliamentary Election in Ukraine: Democratic Rollback
This paper reviews Ukraine’s 2012 parliamentary election. Despite political repressions and significant disadvantages in access to media, the opposition parties won a majority of the proportional representation seats. However, the Party of Regions maintained its parliamentary majority by winning more than half of the single-member districts and luring independent candidates into the ruling coalition. Two new parties that cleared the electoral threshold – UDAR and Svoboda – joined Batkivschyna in their opposition against the incumbent government. The post-election developments indicate that the parliamentary majority established by the Party of Regions is quite unstable and the presence of radical right and radical left parties will make the new parliament highly confrontational.
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Change, Transition or Cycle: The Dynamics of Ukraine’s Political Regime in 2004–2010
Russian Politics and Law, Vol. 49. – No 5. September–October 2011., 2011
Democratization in ukraine has followed a zigzag course. the positive results of the change of leadership brought about by the orange revolution of 2004 were modest and in some respects temporary and did not amount to a change of political regime. the author considers future scenarios and concludes that neither the consolidation of liberal democracy nor a return to authoritarianism is likely.
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Democracy in Ukraine: Are We There Yet?
Ukraine’s transition from Soviet republic to fully democratic state has been inhibited by these cycles. It is yet to be determined whether Ukraine’s democratic development has been set on a sustainable path in the wake of the 2014 Euromaidan, the process of closer political and economic association with the European Union (EU), and the war in Donbas. There are many reasons to hope this is now the case, but there is also cause for serious concern about the sustainability of current reform efforts and democratic politics.
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