仍然“如履薄冰”?看看东扩后对波罗的海国家民主的挑战

Q2 Social Sciences
D. Galbreath
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Although no country is free of corruption, the Baltic states still experience particular opportunities for corruption that are largely to do with economic and political transition. Second, I look at the status of the social integration projects in Estonia and Latvia. Each state has chosen similar but varied paths to dealing with the large Russian-speaking communities in their midst. With the recent \"bronze solider\" riots in Tallinn in mind, I examine whether the social integration projects are working. Before I look at these challenges in the Baltic context, I discuss how far the Baltic states have come.From One Union to AnotherEstonia's, Latvia's, and Lithuania's trails from Soviet republics to EU member states are quite remarkable. While the Baltic states experienced interwar independence, the three societies largely had to build new states from scratch. 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引用次数: 1

摘要

在爱沙尼亚小说家扬•克罗斯的小说《踏空》中,主人公乌洛讲述了二战后苏联占领期间的变化。乌洛把注意力集中在苏联化带来的变化上,并用“踏空”这个比喻来说明没有回报的努力工作。随着苏联的占领,波罗的海地区的政治、经济和文化生活发生了变化。同样,欧洲化正在重塑爱沙尼亚、拉脱维亚和立陶宛。在后苏联国家中,波罗的海国家在民主和经济转型方面比其他所有国家都突出。即使就中欧和东欧而言,波罗的海国家也与捷克共和国、匈牙利和波兰等国表现良好。然而,像所有国家一样,他们仍然面临着民主的挑战。爱沙尼亚、拉脱维亚和立陶宛的政治家从来没有把东扩视为解决他们所有问题的办法,而是一种提高他们应对这些挑战能力的策略。在欧盟(EU)扩大后的三年多时间里,我看着波罗的海国家对民主的持续挑战,并提出这样一个问题:它们还在“踩水”吗?为了梳理这些挑战,我将重点放在三个波罗的海国家普遍存在的两个领域,程度或高或低。第一个问题是政治腐败状况。腐败仍然困扰着波罗的海的政治,特别是在拉脱维亚和立陶宛,尽管爱沙尼亚也不能幸免。最近,围绕文茨皮尔斯市长和拉脱维亚新总统瓦尔迪斯·扎特勒斯(Valdis Zatlers)的腐败问题不断出现。扎特勒斯已证实,他在过去担任医生期间曾收受贿赂。虽然没有一个国家是没有腐败的,但波罗的海国家仍然有特别的腐败机会,这主要与经济和政治转型有关。其次,我考察了爱沙尼亚和拉脱维亚社会融合项目的现状。每个国家都选择了相似但不同的方式来处理他们中间庞大的俄语社区。考虑到最近在塔林发生的“青铜士兵”骚乱,我审视了社会融合项目是否奏效。在我研究波罗的海背景下的这些挑战之前,我先讨论一下波罗的海国家取得了多大的进展。从一个联盟到另一个联盟,爱沙尼亚、拉脱维亚和立陶宛从苏联加盟共和国到欧盟成员国的历程相当引人注目。虽然波罗的海国家经历了两次世界大战之间的独立,但这三个社会在很大程度上不得不从零开始建立新的国家。甚至在苏联占领结束之前,波罗的海共和国和苏联其他地区就开始尝试选举民主。民主选举的“人民阵线”引领了波罗的海独立和三个新兴民主国家的发展。在爱沙尼亚和拉脱维亚,温和的“人民阵线”与民族主义的“公民委员会”争夺政治权力。在这两个国家,“祖国”政党,分别是Isamaa和Tevzemei un Brivibai,在苏联解体后的第一次选举中获得了对政府的控制。“祖国党”的目的是使这两个州合法化(确认国家的头衔);因此爱沙尼亚属于爱沙尼亚人,拉脱维亚属于拉脱维亚人。2 .两次全国选举的结果是建立了一个专一的复辟主义国家。另一方面,立陶宛选民则完全走了一条不同的道路温和的人民阵线(Saju dis)和社会民主主义的立陶宛民主工人党(LDDP) (Lietuvos demokine darbo partija)获得了最多席位,将这个国家推向一个新的包容性国家。这些早期的选择将在许多方面将这两个北部沿海国家与南部沿海国家区别开来,尽管这三个国家都将采取类似的途径加入欧盟。新政府的作用是设计和管理几个同时进行且相互关联的过程。可以说,最重要的进程是民主化与制度化相结合。…
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Still 'treading air'? Looking at the post-enlargement challenges to democracy in the Baltic States
In the novel Treading Air by Estonian novelist Jaan Kroos, the character Ullo shares his story about changes during the Soviet occupation following World War II.1 Ullo concentrates on the changes brought about by Sovietization and uses the metaphor "treading air" to illustrate working hard for no return. With the Soviet occupation, political, economic, and cultural life was transformed in the Baltic region. Likewise, Europeanization is reshaping Estonia, Latvia, and Lithuania. Of the post-Soviet states, the Baltic states have outshone all others in terms of democratic and economic transition. Even in terms of Central and Eastern Europe, the Baltic states have done well alongside countries such as the Czech Republic, Hungary, and Poland. Nevertheless, they still have challenges to democracy, like all states. Never have politicians in Estonia, Latvia, and Lithuania considered enlargement to be the solution to all of their problems, but rather a strategy for improving their ability to deal with these challenges. Over three years on from European Union (EU) enlargement, I look at the persistent challenges to democracy in the Baltic states and ask the question, are they still "treading air"?As a way of teasing out these challenges, I concentrate on two areas prevalent in the three Baltic states, to lesser and greater degrees. The first issue is the state of political corruption. Corruption still dogs Baltic politics, especially in Latvia and Lithuania, although Estonia is not immune. Most recently, questions of corruption have developed surrounding the Ventspils mayor and new Latvian president, Valdis Zatlers, who has confirmed taking bribes in his past job as a medical doctor. Although no country is free of corruption, the Baltic states still experience particular opportunities for corruption that are largely to do with economic and political transition. Second, I look at the status of the social integration projects in Estonia and Latvia. Each state has chosen similar but varied paths to dealing with the large Russian-speaking communities in their midst. With the recent "bronze solider" riots in Tallinn in mind, I examine whether the social integration projects are working. Before I look at these challenges in the Baltic context, I discuss how far the Baltic states have come.From One Union to AnotherEstonia's, Latvia's, and Lithuania's trails from Soviet republics to EU member states are quite remarkable. While the Baltic states experienced interwar independence, the three societies largely had to build new states from scratch. Even before the end of occupation, the Baltic Republics, along with the rest of the Soviet Union, began to experiment with electoral democracy. The democratically elected "people's fronts" led the way to Baltic independence and to three burgeoning democracies. In Estonia and Latvia, the moderate "people's fronts" vied for political power with the nationalist "citizen's com-mittees." In both states, the "Fatherland" parties, Isamaa and Tevzemei un Brivibai, respectively, gained control of the government in the first post-Soviet elections. The purpose of the Fatherland parties was to titularize (confirming to the nation's title) the two states; thus Estonia for Estonians and Latvia for Latvians.2 The result of the two national elections was the establishment of an exclusive restorationist state. On the other hand, the Lithuanian electorate took a different path altogether.3 The moderate people's front, Saju dis, and the social democratic Lithuanian Democratic Worker's Party (LDDP), Lietuvos demokratine darbo partija, gained the most seats to gear the country to a new inclusive state. These early choices would differentiate the two northern littoral states from the one in the south in many ways, although all three would take a similar path to EU membership.The new governments' role was to engineer and manage several simultaneous and interrelated processes. Arguably the most important process has been democratization coupled with titularization. …
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来源期刊
Demokratizatsiya
Demokratizatsiya Social Sciences-Political Science and International Relations
CiteScore
1.40
自引率
0.00%
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0
期刊介绍: Occupying a unique niche among literary journals, ANQ is filled with short, incisive research-based articles about the literature of the English-speaking world and the language of literature. Contributors unravel obscure allusions, explain sources and analogues, and supply variant manuscript readings. Also included are Old English word studies, textual emendations, and rare correspondence from neglected archives. The journal is an essential source for professors and students, as well as archivists, bibliographers, biographers, editors, lexicographers, and textual scholars. With subjects from Chaucer and Milton to Fitzgerald and Welty, ANQ delves into the heart of literature.
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