ID | 117042 |
Title Proper | Dissident writings as political theory on civil society and democracy |
Language | ENG |
Author | Glasius, Marlies |
Publication | 2012. |
Summary / Abstract (Note) | This article offers an analysis of precisely how civil society and its relation to democracy were conceptualised by its East European and South American proponents in their pre-democratic contexts, through an examination of declarations, newspaper articles, samizdat essays, diaries, letters from prison, academic articles and prize acceptance speeches written at the time. The analysis of these source materials is organised under three main themes: the first concerns activists' understanding of the nature of the regime, its aims and its relation to society; the second relates to the features of the emergent civil society the writers of these documents desired, observed, and helped to create; and the final section discusses their strategies and aspirations in relation to 'democratisation'. On the basis of an analysis of commonalities in ideas across these two very different regional and ideological contexts, hypotheses are formulated as building blocks for a political theory of civil society under authoritarian rule, which may apply in yet other, contemporary contexts. |
`In' analytical Note | Review of International Studies Vol. 38, No.2; Apr 2012: p.343-364 |
Journal Source | Review of International Studies Vol. 38, No.2; Apr 2012: p.343-364 |
Key Words | Political Theory ; Civil Society ; Democracy ; East Europe ; South America |