Jul 23, 2007

CfP: Colored Revolutions

The Hannah Arendt Institute for the Study of Totalitarianism

http://www.hait. tu-dresden. de/ext/homepage. asp

is preparing a special number of its journal '³Totalitarianism and Democracy '´

http://www.hait. tu-dresden. de/td/

Focusing on the coloured revolutions happened in Eastern Europe and former Soviet Countries (see the rationale below).

The issue will come out in spring 2008 and the deadline is the 20 of October, 2007 (for the first submission, articles will then be reviewed and the final submission date will be the 25 of November)

Interested authors are invited to send an abstract (max 500 words) by the 17 of August to

Prof. Donnacha Ó Beacháin
donnacha@kimep. kz , (back up address donnacha_1@yahoo. com)

Abel Polese

Abel.Polese@ mailbox.tu- dresden.de (back up address abelpolese@yahoo. co.uk)

Authors of accepted abstract will be notified by the 22 of August 2007.

English is preferred but articles in German can be accepted as well

Towards a theory of democratic revolutions? Some evidence from Eurasia
1998-2006

(NB contributions focusing on previous protest movements such as those in Czechoslovakia or the Baltic are very welcome, as long as they can show a connection between them and those that form the primary focus of our analysis)

Since 1998 the Eurasian geopolitical landscape has been affected by what have been labeled the '±colored revolutions '², referring to a number of socio-political transformations attempted, but not necessarily achieved, in a number of countries, namely: Slovakia (1998), Serbia (2000), Belarus (2001 and 2006), Georgia (2003),
Ukraine (2004), Kyrgyzstan (2005) and immediately sedated in Russia, Uzbekistan (2005), Azerbaijan (2005), Kazakhstan (2005).

Those events have certainly some elements in common with the second wave of revolutions, which occured in Germany, Poland, the Czech Republic and the Baltic Countries in 1989 but they also some completely new features like the growing use of the Internet, humor and art to deliver a message, and the significant involvement of
grassroot NGOs.

In some cases these '±revolutions '² have led to a radical political and social change in the country, in other cases not. It is our belief that the '±people '² factor is decisive in determining the nature of a revolution and popular attitudes are crucial for a successful movement. However, it is up to leaders to create the
conditions for people to become aware and motivate them to act. How is it possible to create the conditions necessary for a revolution to happen and to be successful?

To answer this question one should
go beyond the vision that sees economic and logistic support to the opposition as the main elements of a successful revolution. Likewise the opinion that '±people stood up and fought for democracy '² should be examined and analyses should try to understand the relative importance of external aid and popular attitudes in determining the '±success '² of a revolution. A revolution is '±successful '²
if it leads to a substantial change in the country. The easiest indicator of this change is a political one, however a social change might also be employed as an indicator of success, when it is measurable.

All the opposition movements made use of protest techniques developed over the years and often based on Gene Sharp '²s theory of power (1973) and his a

guidebook '±from dictatorship to democracy '².

Some theoretical questions we want to answer are:

Why did the use of revolutionary tools not lead to the same result all over the post-communist spaces? Is it because those tools were used correctly in some cases and incorrectly in others or because '±geography '² matters?

What was the role of the ruling elite in preventing the development of civil society and stymieing protests and to what degree was the role of the political opposition, external actors and NGO networking important?

Is there a saturation point for the '±colored revolutions '² after which all attempts to use such techniques will be futile ? Or is it the case that some '±revolutions '² were not attempted in the right place or at the right moment?

By exploring these questions above and drawing from the experiences of these '±revolutions '², we seek to spell out a theory of '±colored revolutions '² that can provide some common points for all the social changes that have occurred between 1998-2006. To do this, we welcome theory generating contributions that focus on a country as case study or propose a comparative analysis of a number of countries.

Contributions should analyze one or more elements that have to be encountered when '±organizing a revolution '². In particular we might divide the topics in the following way:

(the list is not exhaustive and potential contributors are welcome to discuss with the editors a possible focus)

a) Ideology and a theoretical framework

The role of previous waves of revolutions

The reference texts of a revolution

The role of Gene Sharp '²s '±theory of power '², '±from dictatorship to democracy '² and other ideological sources

b) The will to set up a revolutionary apparatus

The work of the Einstein Foundation in Eurasia

The role of foreign and domestic intelligence forces

The legacy of previous protest movements

Democratic ideology in regional context

Existence of a team of revolution makers at national and international level that has been operating in Eurasia and is extending its field of action to other regions

c) Fundraising

Relations with foreign foundations

Domestic fundraising: contact with local businessmen

Door to door fundraising: gathering goods other than money (labor force, commodities, ideas, services, ideological and physical support)

d) Training of activists

Contact with other successful protest movements

Relations with foreign foundations

Domestic trainings of activists

e) Coordination and cooperation of forces

Relations between the political and NGO forces before, during and after the political crisis

Networking between domestic NGOs

Relations between the political forces, national based and grassroot NGOs

f) Containing the influence of hostile actors

The role of external forces such as the EU, Russia and USA and their influence on civil society

Coping with an hostile environment and limiting the influence of the current regime

Alliances of the opposition and civil society with some major personalities of the ruling elite that subsequently/ thereafter support the protest movements

g) Involving and motivating people

The People '²s attitude, in a comparative historical and/or geographical perspective

Communication between the leaders and people to motive them

The relations between NGOs and '³ordinary '´ people

Communication between active and passive strata of the population

h) Capacity to choose time and modality to carry out the revolution

The logistics of a revolution

How to prepare scenarios (optimistic and pessimistic) of a revolution

The right time to carry out a revolution

[sursa balkans]

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