Weak Civic Engagement?
Post-Communist Participation and Democratic Consolidation
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Jagiellonian University
Publication date: 2008-04-03
Polish Sociological Review 2008;161(1):73-88
KEYWORDS
ABSTRACT
The aim of this article is to analyze the problem of civic and political participation in the postcommunist
context from the perspective of contemporary democratic theory, the concept of democratic
consolidation, and the thesis of the “weakness of civil society in post-communist countries.” It argues that the
institutional approach to democratization and participation does not provide a full answer to the question
of how democratic systems become consolidated and thus it needs to be supplemented by the cultural
approach. The analysis of the patterns of democratic participation in post-communist countries, however,
is further complicated by their background conditions, the burden of the communist past, and the model
of democratization that they have undergone. Although it seems that a participatory, civil-society centred
type of democratic politics would revitalize and strengthen democracy in post-communist countries, two
questions—addressed in this article—arise. First, whether contemporary democratic theories shed enough
light on the processes involved when it comes to a democratic change and democratic consolidation
in the post-communist context, and second, whether a weak civic sphere is a major impediment to the
development of a truly democratic system.
ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS
The author is a holder of the Foundation for Polish Science scholarship