ABSTRACT

Although "democracy promotion" has become a popular term for policy makers and scholars, democratization is rarely a smooth or linear transition. While some countries quickly democratize, others lag behind despite a long period of democracy promotion activities. Furthermore, while democracy promotion itself has been widely studied, there is a paucity of literature available assessing the outcome or the impact of democracy promotion.

This book investigates democracy promotion by the European Union and the United States of America, and seeks to uncover why intensive democracy promotion has resulted in limited democratic progress. Exploring case studies of Armenia, Azerbaijan, and Georgia, this book examines the conditions in which democracy promotion is more likely to result in democratic transformation. In addition, it introduces the concept of the "democracy blocker," a powerful authoritarian regional actor that is capable of blocking democratization in other countries.

This book will be of interest to students and scholars of Political Science, Democracy, Democratization, EU Studies, US Politics, Comparative Politics, and Foreign Policy.

chapter |9 pages

Introduction

part 1|38 pages

Democracy promotion, democratization, transformation

part II|58 pages

Local ingredients of the global democratic recipe

chapter 3|20 pages

The South Caucasus

The road to democracy or a blind alley?

chapter 4|36 pages

The EU and the US

Confusion, ambitions, and the reality

part III|94 pages

Sectoral democratic transformation

chapter 5|14 pages

Elections in the South Caucasus

A Potemkin village rather than a solid construction

chapter 6|13 pages

Parties in the South Caucasus

Do they really matter?

chapter 7|16 pages

Media in the South Caucasus

The watchdog may bark but rarely bite

chapter |49 pages

Conclusions

The damsel in distress and the bully in the sandbox