Приказ основних података о документу

dc.creatorVladisavljević, Nebojša
dc.date.accessioned2021-04-02T12:28:13Z
dc.date.available2021-04-02T12:28:13Z
dc.date.issued2019
dc.identifier.issn0090-5992
dc.identifier.urihttp://rfpn.fpn.bg.ac.rs/handle/123456789/757
dc.description.abstractPopular protest, which repeatedly occurred in Communist regimes, turned into massive mobilizational waves in the late Communist period. Why did some protests result in state cooptation and particularist nationalism (Yugoslavia and the Soviet Union), and others in state-society polarization (Poland) and protest containment (China), when these states shared important historical, political, and institutional legacies? Political regimes with origins in indigenous popularly-based revolutionary movements are more resilient to popular protests and other major crises than other authoritarian regimes. Protracted ideological armed struggle largely overlaps with broader patriotic causes, such as liberation wars or struggles against foreign intervention. The revolutionary regimes thus acquire patriotic credentials, while boundaries between partisan and patriotic identities become blurred, which strengthens their elite unity and popular base. Popular protests thus facilitate a complex political game of old and new actors that may result in regime survival or transformation. In other regimes, popular unrest tends to produce state-society polarization and, ultimately, regime delegitimation and breakdown. Popular contention in complex multinational institutional settings, if there is no major external threat, highlights old and triggers new conflicts along these structural and institutional divides and, where dual political identities prevail, facilitates identity shifts in particularist direction.en
dc.publisherCambridge Univ Press, New York
dc.relationinfo:eu-repo/grantAgreement/MESTD/Integrated and Interdisciplinary Research (IIR or III)/47026/RS//
dc.rightsrestrictedAccess
dc.sourceNationalities Papers
dc.subjectpolitical regimesen
dc.subjectrevolutionary legaciesen
dc.subjectpopular protesten
dc.subjectauthoritarianismen
dc.subjectYugoslaviaen
dc.subjectthe Soviet Unionen
dc.subjectPolanden
dc.subjectChinaen
dc.titleRevolutionary Origins of Political Regimes and Trajectories of Popular Mobilization in the Late Communist Perioden
dc.typearticle
dc.rights.licenseARR
dc.citation.epage561
dc.citation.issue4
dc.citation.other47(4): 545-561
dc.citation.rankM21
dc.citation.spage545
dc.citation.volume47
dc.identifier.doi10.1017/nps.2018.62
dc.identifier.scopus2-s2.0-85072921258
dc.identifier.wos000486260200002
dc.type.versionpublishedVersion


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