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ID163577
Title ProperOut of the barracks
Other Title Informationthe role of the military in democratic revolutions
LanguageENG
AuthorDegaut, Marcos
Summary / Abstract (Note)Why some democratic revolutions succeed while others fail? The scholarly community has sought to address this issue from various perspectives, from rational choice approaches to collective action theories. Too little attention, however, has been paid to analyzing the role of the military. By discussing the different types of interactions played by the military in five cases of successful democratic revolutions—the 1910 Portuguese Republican Revolution, the 1958 Venezuelan Revolution, the 1960 April Revolution in South Korea, the 1989 Velvet Revolution in Czechoslovakia, and the 2000 Bulldozer Revolution in Yugoslavia—and three cases of failed revolutions, the 1905 bourgeois-liberal revolution in Russia, the 1989 Tiananmen Square Protests in China, and the 2016 Turkey’s coup attempt, this study finds out that the key factor in determining their outcome is the army’s response and that the military backing is a necessary condition for a democratic revolution to succeed.
`In' analytical NoteArmed Forces and Society Vol. 45, No.1; Jan 2019: p.78-100
Journal SourceArmed Forces and Society Vol: 45 No 1
Key WordsDemocracy ;  Civil Military Relations ;  Coups and Conflicts ;  Cohesion/Disintegration


 
 
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