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Overview
One of the more positive international trends as of late has been the transformation of several countries from authoritarian-based dictatorships and single party systems into multi-party democracies characterized by peaceful political transitions. In this volume, a group of experts are gathered to analyze this progression on a comparative level. The essays reveal how the dramatic collapse of the USSR functioned as a crucial catalyst in allowing pent-up domestic pressures for change to emerge in a less charged international environment. In addition, the chapters study the historical and current evolution of these countries, focusing on their success in developing long-term pluralistic structures, and gauging whether these recent trends are more overnight fads than long lasting advancements.
Synopsis
One of the more positive international trends as of late has been the transformation of several countries from authoritarian-based dictatorships and single party systems into multi-party democracies characterized by peaceful political transitions. In this volume, a group of experts are gathered to analyze this progression on a comparative level. The essays reveal how the dramatic collapse of the USSR functioned as a crucial catalyst in allowing pent-up domestic pressures for change to emerge in a less charged international environment. In addition, the chapters study the historical and current evolution of these countries, focusing on their success in developing long-term pluralistic structures, and gauging whether these recent trends are more overnight fads than long lasting advancements.
Booknews
Rimanelli (European and security studies, St. Leo College, Florida) and several other American scholars of government, explore how the collapse of the USSR was a catalyst to the bursting forth of internal pressures in a variety of contexts. Essays examine countries such as Italy, Japan, Russia, Hungary, Mexico, Taiwan, and Nigeria, and their historical and current political evolution. Organization is in three sections covering countries that have democratized or pluralized from Western single party-dominant systems, Marxist regimes, and Third World single-party systems. Annotation c. Book News, Inc., Portland, OR (booknews.com)