The Imperative to Shift Armenia’s Peripherality: Contradictions of Institutionalisation and Functioning in Conditions of Democratic Transition

Authors

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.46991/JOPS/2023.2.5.056

Keywords:

Armenia, civil society, democratisation, centre-periphery model, democratic transformation , institutional relationship, civic activism

Abstract

This article offers a discussion about the possibility for Armenia’s democratisation, and shift of its peripherality. The intention is to develop a thinking around the opportunities towards creating an environment in which a democratic transformation may be possible. The article uses the centre-periphery model and a decentring research agenda to build on the argument and a possibility for the shift of Armenia’s peripherality by means of its civil society. The article argues that if the former practices have failed the country today, it may be relevant to consider the shifting of former practices, which may as well result in shifting country’s peripherality. In this context, the process of democratisation of modern Armenia, which is conditioned by a number of factors, presupposing, first of all, the active participation of its civil society, is analysed. This article concentrates on the analysis of one of the necessary conditions for democracy and democratic transition, namely country’s local agency, the civil society. The article is prepared based on the premise that public policies shall follow opinion and expertise of country’s local agency.

Author Biography

Valentina Gevorgyan, Yerevan State University

PhD in Political Science, Assistant Professor of the Chair of Political Science of the Faculty of International Relations at Yerevan State University

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Published

2023-09-29

How to Cite

Gevorgyan, V. (2023). The Imperative to Shift Armenia’s Peripherality: Contradictions of Institutionalisation and Functioning in Conditions of Democratic Transition. Journal of Political Science: Bulletin of Yerevan University, 2(2(5), 56–75. https://doi.org/10.46991/JOPS/2023.2.5.056

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Section

Comparative politics