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ID089261
Title ProperRegime-hybridity in developing countries
Other Title Informationachievements and limitations of new research on transitions
LanguageENG
AuthorZinecker, Heidurn
Publication2009.
Summary / Abstract (Note)Research on transitions has reached a crossroad. Should it be abandoned because the third wave of transitions to democracy has ended, or should it continue because so much remains unaccounted for regarding the third wave? This paper suggests that regime hybridity constitutes a widespread institutional setting resulting from incomplete transitions. Regime-hybridity is defined as a specific regime type in which "partial regimes" within the "political regime" are democratic while others are nondemocratic, although not necessarily authoritarian. Underlying the concept is the assumption that the "political regime" stretches beyond the institutions of the state to include civil society. It is at this level that the work on transitions can be connected to the research on the dynamics of economic exclusion in the context of rent economies. This paper develops a checklist for identifying "partial regimes" that constitute regime-hybridity and applies it to the case of Colombia to identify linkages between political transition and socioeconomic transformation.
`In' analytical NoteInternational Studies Review Vol. 11, No. 2; June 2009: p302-331
Journal SourceInternational Studies Review Vol. 11, No. 2; June 2009: p302-331
Key WordsRegime - Hybridity - Developing Countries ;  Developing Countries ;  Research Transitions - Developing Countries ;  Developing Countries - Limitations


 
 
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