ISBN-13: 9780415304153 / Angielski / Twarda / 2003 / 180 str.
ISBN-13: 9780415304153 / Angielski / Twarda / 2003 / 180 str.
The fall of the Berlin Wall showed democratic revolutions to be extremely important events in the modern world, yet these have neither been added to the revolutionary canon nor adequately incorporated into the literature on democratic transitions. In theorizing peaceful popular uprisings against dictatorships and comparing them across Asia and Eastern Europe, Democratic Revolutions revives a much-neglected concept. Despite enormous differences between Asia and Eastern Europe, there are striking similarities between the peaceful, spontaneous, urban-based and cross-class democratic uprisings against unyielding dictatorships that have occurred in the two regions. The book explores the kind of non-democratic regimes that are particularly vulnerable to democratic revolutions. It examines why and how democrats rebel and what the results of democratic revolutions have been. Questions posed in this book include: Why were communist rulers shot in China but not in Eastern Europe? Why did stolen elections lead to the overthrow of Miloevic in Serbia? Why have there been so many women leading democratic revolutions in Asia? This book attempts to democratize theories of revolution and revolution