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PostSoviet Transitions and Conflict Resolution: Attempts to build Democratic NationState in an Ethnically Diverse Country: the,Used
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The study aims to extend the theory of the Fourth Wave of transition in the Postcommunist world endorsed by Michael McFaul (2004), and to find out to what extent and why Georgia, unlike Central and Eastern European countries, during its transition from communism and after ended up with an unconsolidated regime burdened with interethnic conflicts and semidictatorial rules. Thus, in order to answer my research question, I embarked on an analysis of Georgias political landscape since the collapse of the Soviet Union, particularly the attempts, challenges and factors that Georgia faced during the presidential rule of Gamsakhurdia, Shevardnadze and Saakashvili. In order to accomplish my analysis, I applied a case study on Georgias statebuilding processes and conflict resolution. Based on my findings, the theory indeed explains the reasons why Georgias transition ended up with an unconsolidated state and hybrid or semiautocratic rules: the presence of territorial disputes, its geographical location and the Soviet legacy of ethnofederalism.
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