Pregled bibliografske jedinice broj: 641342
Civil Society: An Inevitable Partner in the Development of Local Communities in Young Democracies
Civil Society: An Inevitable Partner in the Development of Local Communities in Young Democracies // Local Economic and Infrastructure Development of SEE in the Context of EU Accession / Osmanković, Jasmina ; Pejanović, Mirko ; Tihi, Bois ; Čičić, Muris (ur.).
Sarajevo: Akademija nauka i umjetosti Bosne i Hercegovine (ANUBiH), 2013. str. 45-57 (pozvano predavanje, međunarodna recenzija, cjeloviti rad (in extenso), znanstveni)
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Naslov
Civil Society: An Inevitable Partner in the Development of Local Communities in Young Democracies
Autori
Kregar, Josip ; Petričušić, Antonija
Vrsta, podvrsta i kategorija rada
Radovi u zbornicima skupova, cjeloviti rad (in extenso), znanstveni
Izvornik
Local Economic and Infrastructure Development of SEE in the Context of EU Accession
/ Osmanković, Jasmina ; Pejanović, Mirko ; Tihi, Bois ; Čičić, Muris - Sarajevo : Akademija nauka i umjetosti Bosne i Hercegovine (ANUBiH), 2013, 45-57
ISBN
978-9958-501-92-0
Skup
Local economic and infrastructure development of see in the context of the EU
Mjesto i datum
Sarajevo, Bosna i Hercegovina, 20.09.2013
Vrsta sudjelovanja
Pozvano predavanje
Vrsta recenzije
Međunarodna recenzija
Ključne riječi
democratic consolidation; consolidation of civic culture and civil society; civil society; trust
Sažetak
The classical democratization theories often ignore the importance of civil society in successful democratic consolidation emphasizing predominantly the importance of institutional consolidation and legislative reforms. However, institutions and legal norms are often empty shells in democratic consolidation if not promoted among political forces (representative and behavioural consolidation) and through consolidation of civil society and civic culture (attitudinal consolidation). In this article we argue that the process of democratic consolidation has many dimensions and is result of specific ideographic circumstances. The cultural (political culture) and institutional dimension (institutional building) of democratic consolidation do not correspond and have different pace and scope of changes. That is because the cultural change is slow, reinforced by mentalities which are often not supportive towards new institutional principles and blueprints, legislative changes and official politics. In such discrepancy, the phenomenon is seen as unpredictable, as a gap between programs and realities, strategies and realization. The change is perceived as formal and successes are reversible. In the emerging democracies such a gap is bridged by the activity of the civil society. Though the civil society is promoting democratic values and policies it cannot replace the main institutional skeleton of state (bureaucracy, political parties, etc.). It furthermore depends significantly on global programs and international support which subsequently might result in a strong bias toward isolation from society and the local priorities. The situation is paradoxical: the state and political elites are not ready to promote (democratic) changes and civil society organizations are marginalized to politically neutral subjects. In explaining conditions pertinent to a successful democratic consolidation, this article assesses if civil society has the capacity to promote changes of predominant social values in young democracies and induce an emergence of civic culture.
Izvorni jezik
Engleski
Znanstvena područja
Pravo, Politologija, Sociologija
Napomena
DOI 10.5644/PI2013-153-02
POVEZANOST RADA
Ustanove:
Pravni fakultet, Zagreb