Detailed Information on Publication Record
2001
Slovakia country report. NIT 2001.
VAŠEČKA, Michal, Grigorij MESEŽNIKOV, Miroslav KOLLÁR and Jozef MAJCHRÁKBasic information
Original name
Slovakia country report. NIT 2001.
Name in Czech
Slovensko. NIT 2001.
Authors
VAŠEČKA, Michal (703 Slovakia, guarantor), Grigorij MESEŽNIKOV (703 Slovakia), Miroslav KOLLÁR (703 Slovakia) and Jozef MAJCHRÁK (703 Slovakia)
Edition
1. vydání. New York, In: Karatnycky, A. - Motyl, A. - Schnetzer, A. (eds): Civil Society, Democracy and Markets in East Central Europe and Newly Independent States. Nations in Transit 2001. p. 478-507, 31 pp. Nations in Transit, 2001
Publisher
The Freedom House
Other information
Language
English
Type of outcome
Kapitola resp. kapitoly v odborné knize
Field of Study
50601 Political science
Country of publisher
United States of America
Confidentiality degree
není předmětem státního či obchodního tajemství
References:
Organization unit
Faculty of Social Studies
ISBN
0-7658-0897-8
Keywords in English
Slovakia; transformation; democratization; economy; public media; EU integration
Tags
International impact, Reviewed
Změněno: 22/1/2009 05:10, PhDr. Michal Vašečka, Ph.D.
V originále
Building the institutional fundaments of a new state was accompanied for several years by the endeavor of democratic forces to preserve the degree of freedom and democracy achieved during the initial period of transition after the collapse of Communist regime (1990 1992) and, subsequently, to overcome the democratic deficits that prevented the country from fulfilling its integration ambitions when it was disqualified from the first wave of NATO enlargement and was not invited to open entry negotiations with the EU. This endeavor led to a change in power following the 1998 parliamentary elections. The results of these elections reflected all changes that had occurred within the Slovak society since the collapse of the Communist regime in November 1989. The fact that tables turned in the 1998 elections was due to a high degree of political mobilization of all pro-democratic citizens, implementation of sufficiently effective coalition strategies by democratic political forces, formation of broad democratic alliances amalgamated by a single objective to prevent the authoritarian regime from cementing any further, activation of civil society players that efficiently combined spontaneous and organized activities, an ability to capitalize on the expert potential accumulated within the nongovernmental sector and general strengthening of the countrys social capital.
In Czech
Building the institutional fundaments of a new state was accompanied for several years by the endeavor of democratic forces to preserve the degree of freedom and democracy achieved during the initial period of transition after the collapse of Communist regime (1990 1992) and, subsequently, to overcome the democratic deficits that prevented the country from fulfilling its integration ambitions when it was disqualified from the first wave of NATO enlargement and was not invited to open entry negotiations with the EU. This endeavor led to a change in power following the 1998 parliamentary elections. The results of these elections reflected all changes that had occurred within the Slovak society since the collapse of the Communist regime in November 1989. The fact that tables turned in the 1998 elections was due to a high degree of political mobilization of all pro-democratic citizens, implementation of sufficiently effective coalition strategies by democratic political forces, formation of broad democratic alliances amalgamated by a single objective to prevent the authoritarian regime from cementing any further, activation of civil society players that efficiently combined spontaneous and organized activities, an ability to capitalize on the expert potential accumulated within the nongovernmental sector and general strengthening of the countrys social capital.
Links
MSM 142300001, plan (intention) |
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