The Politics of Protest in Non-democratic Regimes

Authors

  • Nebojša Vladisavljević Faculty of Political Science, University of Belgrade, Belgrade

Keywords:

autoritarianism, competetive autoritarianism, popular protest, mobilization, Poland, Yugoslavia, Serbia

Abstract

The paper explores the politics of protest in non-democratic regimes using insights from comparative regime analysis and social movement theory. A regime type strongly shapes factors that trigger popular mobilization, the repertories of collective action and their implications. Protest politics may produce a considerable political change, such as policy and personality change in the political establishment, as well as important shifts in the structure and operation of non-democratic regimes, even regime change. The paper provides evidence from the late communist authoritarian Poland and Yugoslavia, in which sustained protests contributed to the collapse of regime and state, and the post-communist competitive authoritarian Serbia and Ukraine, which experience repeated protest waves and were brought down by protest politics.

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Published

2019-03-15