Breadcrumbs Section. Click here to navigate to respective pages.
Book

Book
Parliamentary Elites in Central and Eastern Europe
DOI link for Parliamentary Elites in Central and Eastern Europe
Parliamentary Elites in Central and Eastern Europe book
Parliamentary Elites in Central and Eastern Europe
DOI link for Parliamentary Elites in Central and Eastern Europe
Parliamentary Elites in Central and Eastern Europe book
Get Citation
ABSTRACT
Legislators are entrusted with key parliamentary functions and are important figures in the decision-making process. Their behaviour as political elites is as much responsible for the failures and successes of the new democracies as their institutional designs and constitutional reforms.
This book provides a comparative examination of representative elites and their role in democratic development in post-communist Central and Eastern Europe (CEE). It argues that as the drivers of the transformation process in CEE, individual and collective parliamentary actors matter. The authors provide an in-depth analysis of representatives from eleven national parliaments and explore country-specific features of recruitment and representation. They draw on an integrated dataset of parliamentary elites for individual, party family, and parliamentary variables over the 20 years following the collapse of Communism and develop a common framework for the analysis of variations in democratisation and political professionalisation between parliaments and political parties/party families across CEE.
This unique volume will be of interest to students and scholars of comparative politics, elite research, post-communist politics, democratisation, legislative studies, and parliamentary representation.
TABLE OF CONTENTS
chapter 1|30 pages
Parliamentary elite formation after Communism: an introduction
part |2 pages
Part I Central European parliaments
chapter 2|21 pages
The Czech parliament on the road to professionalization and stabilization
chapter 3|20 pages
Hungarian MPs in the context of political transformation (1990–2010)
chapter 4|23 pages
The Polish Diet since 1989: from fragmentation to consolidation
part |2 pages
Part II Baltic parliaments
chapter 5|23 pages
Recruitment of parliamentary representatives in an ethno- liberal democracy: Estonia
chapter 7|24 pages
Lithuanian parliamentary elites after 1990: dilemmas of political representation and political professionalism
part |2 pages
Part III Southeast European parliaments
chapter 8|23 pages
Croatian parliamentary elites: toward professionalization and homogenization
chapter 9|23 pages
The “waiting room”: Romanian parliament after 1989
part |2 pages
Part IV Post- Soviet parliaments