Civil-Military Relations in Post-Communist Europe Reviewing the Transition
Coordonnateurs : Edmunds Timothy, Cottey Andrew, Forster Anthony
Fifteen years after the fall of communism, we are able to appraise the results of the multi-faceted postcommunist transition in Central and Eastern Europe with authority. This volume specifically addresses the fascinating area of Civil-Military relations throughout this transitional period.
The countries of the region inherited a onerous legacy in this area: their armed forces were part of the communist party-state system and most were oriented towards Cold War missions; they were large in size and supported by high levels of defence spending; and they were based on universal male conscription. Central and eastern European states have thus faced a three fold civil-military reform challenge: establishing democratic and civilian control over their armed forces; implementing organisational reform to meet the security and foreign policy demands of the new era; and redefining military bases for legitimacy in society.
This volume assesses the experiences of Poland, Hungary, Latvia, Romania, Croatia, Serbia-Montenegro, Ukraine and Russia in these areas. Collectively these countries illustrate the way in which the interaction of broadly similar postcommunist challenges and distinct national contexts have combined to produce a wide variety of different patterns of civil-military relations.
This book was previously published as a special issue of European Security.
Introduction 1. Civil-Military Relations in Postcommunist Europe: Assessing the Transition 2. The Half-Hearted Transformation of the Hungarian Military 3. The Transformation of Postcommunist Civil-Military Relations in Poland 4. Democracy and Defence in Latvia: Thirteen Years of Development: 1991—2004 5. Civil-Military Relations in Croatia: Politicisation and Politics of Reform 6. The Transformation of Romanian Civil-Military Relations: Enabling Force Projection 7. Civil-Military Relations in Serbia-Montenegro: An Army in Search of a State 8. Vladimir Putin and Military Reform in Russia 9. Ukraine: Reform in the Context of Flawed Democracy and Geopolitical Anxiety
Timothy Edmunds is a Lecturer in Development and Security at the Department of Politics, University of Bristol
Andrew Cottey is Jean Monnet Chair in European Political Integration and a Lecturer at the Department of Government, University College Cork.
Anthony Forster is Professor of Politics and International Relations and Head of Department at the Department of Politics, University of Bristol.
Date de parution : 08-2018
15.6x23.4 cm
Date de parution : 12-2005
Ouvrage de 192 p.
15.6x23.4 cm
Thèmes de Civil-Military Relations in Post-Communist Europe :
Mots-clés :
defence; reform; armed; forces; budget; minister; sector; general; staff; croatian; NATO Integration; NATO Assignment; Young Men; NATO Accession; State Secretary; NATO Standard; National Security Strategy; NATO Membership; Civil Military Relations; NATO Member State; NATO's Intervention; Defence Reform; NATO Consultation; Baltic Defence College; NATO Interoperability; NATO Study; Civil Military Reform; NATO Auspice; NATO System; NATO Member; Postcommunist Europe; Military Society Relations; Democratic Civil Military Relations; NATO Council; NATO Government