Publication | Closed Access
Women and Democratization Conceptualizing Gender Relations in Transition Politics
357
Citations
65
References
1994
Year
DemocracyEastern EuropeWomen's EmpowermentCivil SocietyTransition PoliticsGender StudiesPolitical DevelopmentFeminist PerspectiveFeminist Political TheoryPolitical TransformationPolitical MovementsLatin AmericaFeminist TheoryPolitical ScienceSocial Sciences
This article examines the impact of gender relations on democratization. It considers a number of key questions: what role do women's movements play in the transition to democratic rule and what impact does a return to competitive electoral politics have on women and women's movements. The starting point is a critique of the existing literature on democratization. That literature cannot provide a satisfactory analysis of the role of women in transition politics because of the narrow definitions of democracy used and the top-down focus of much of it. The article then develops a gendered analysis through a comparison of the different processes of transition in Latin America and Central and Eastern Europe. It highlights the significance of the relationship between civil society and the state and the existence of “political space.”
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