ABSTRACT

The communist world was supposed to have had its ‘revolution’ in 1989. But the demise of the Soviet Union came two years later, at the end of 1991; and then, perplexingly, a series of irregular executive changes began to take place the following decade in countries that were already postcommunist. The focus in this collection is the changes that took place in Serbia, Georgia, Ukraine and Kyrgyzstan between 2000 and 2005 that have together been called the ‘coloured revolutions’: of no particular colour in Serbia, but Rose in Georgia, Orange in Ukraine and Tulip in Kyrgyzstan.

Apart from exploring political change in the ‘coloured revolution’ countries themselves, the contributors to this collection focus on countries that did not experience this kind of irregular executive change but which might otherwise be comparable (Belarus and Kazakhstan among them), and on reactions to ‘democracy promotion’ in Russia and China. Throughout, an effort is made to avoid taking the ‘coloured revolutions’ at face value, however they may have been presented by local leaders and foreign governments with their own agendas; and to place them within the wider literature of comparative politics.

This book was previously published as a special issue of Journal of Communist Studies and Transition Politics.

chapter 4|18 pages

Contested Sovereignty

The International Politics of Regime Change in the Federal Republic of Yugoslavia

chapter 5|28 pages

Roses and Tulips

Dynamics of Regime Change in Georgia and Kyrgyzstan

chapter 7|23 pages

Ukraine 2004

Informal Networks, Transformation of Social Capital and Coloured Revolutions

chapter 8|19 pages

Class Voting and the Orange Revolution

A Cultural Political Economy Perspective on Ukraine's Electoral Geography

chapter 9|27 pages

Rethinking the International Diffusion of Coloured Revolutions

The Power of Representation in Kyrgyzstan

chapter 11|22 pages

The Legacy of the ‘Coloured Revolutions'

The Case of Kazakhstan

chapter 12|27 pages

Coloured Revolutions

The View from Moscow and Beijing

chapter 13|17 pages

Is There a Pattern?