Recent regional developments in human rights and democratisation in South-East Europe during 2019 / Marjan Icoski, Aida Salihović-Gušić, Mariola Ceku, Meris Mušanović, Marija Ivanović
2020
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Title
Recent regional developments in human rights and democratisation in South-East Europe during 2019 / Marjan Icoski, Aida Salihović-Gušić, Mariola Ceku, Meris Mušanović, Marija Ivanović
Imprint
Venice, Italy: Global Campus of Human Rights, 2020
Language Note
English
Summary
The region of South-East Europe (SEE) continues to be marked
by competitive authoritarian regimes. This article employs a dynamic
understanding of competitive authoritarianism that places the emphasis on
a movement of a regime towards or away from either ends of the imagined
consolidated democracy-authoritarian regime spectrum. More precisely, the
article highlights strategies used by the parties in power to increase the control
in society and thus consolidate political power, while also paying attention
to contestations that arise against these negative trends in four countries of
the region: Serbia, Albania, Bosnia and Herzegovina and North Macedonia.
The general findings reveal that the region is experiencing a continued trend
of democratic backsliding in 2019. Two main structural reasons behind this
seem to be (i) weak democratic institutions; and (ii) autocratic-minded political
leaders, who tend to increase their power. As the contributions demonstrated,
in 2019 ruling parties (or coalitions) in the region tended to increase control
over media, continued to show disregard for the human rights of minorities and
vulnerable groups, while also taking advantage of the ill-functioning judiciary
unable to prosecute high-level cases of corruption. These negative trends
resulted in a rather bleak democratisation impulse in the region, despite the
larger scale citizen mobilisations against increased authoritarianism present
in several countries.
Key words: competitive authoritarianism; political control; protests;
democracy; human rights
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Language
English