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      Rethinking Recent Democratization: Lessons from the Postcommunist Experience

      World Politics
      Johns Hopkins University Press

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          Winners Take All: The Politics of Partial Reform in Postcommunist Transitions

          Conventional models of the politics of economic reform tend to be based on an assumption about the costs and benefits of reform, known informally as the J-curve. Reforms are expected to make things worse before they get better. This presents a classictime inconsistency dilemmafor reformist governments forced to demand severe sacrifices from the public in the short term for the mere promise of future gains. In response, political economy models of the reform process have tended to stress the importance of insulating governments from the pressures of the short-term losers until a sufficient constituency of winners has been created with a stake in supporting and enhancing the reforms.
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            Subversive Institutions

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              Geographic Diffusion and the Transformation of the Postcommunist World

              Since the collapse of communism the states of postcommunist Europe and Asia have defined for themselves, and have had defined for them, two primary tasks: the construction of viable market economies and the establishment of working institutions of representative democracy. The variation in political and economic outcomes in the postcommunist space makes it, without question, the most diverse “region” in the world. What explains the variation? All of the big winners of postcommunism share the trait of being geographically close to the former border of the noncommunist world. Even controlling for cultural differences, historical legacies, and paths of extrication, the spatial effect remains consistent and strong across the universe of postcommunist cases. This suggests the spatially dependent nature of the diffusion of norms, resources, and institutions that are necessary to the construction of political democracies and market economies in the postcommunist era. The authors develop and adduce evidence for the spatial dependence hypothesis, test it against rival hypotheses, and illustrate the relationships at work through three theoretically important case studies.
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                Author and article information

                Journal
                applab
                World Politics
                World Pol.
                Johns Hopkins University Press
                0043-8871
                1086-3338
                January 2003
                June 2011
                : 55
                : 02
                : 167-192
                Article
                10.1353/wp.2003.0010
                2bfb3abd-4f97-41a4-9e23-5c004b0a0c33
                © 2003
                History

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