01413pab a2200169 454500008004000000100002200040245007300062260000900135300001600144362000800160520095800168650002001126650002201146650001401168700002701182773003401209180718b2009 xxu||||| |||| 00| 0 eng d aKalandadze, Katya aElectoral protests and democratization: beyond the color revolutions c2009 ap.1403-425. aNov aThe sight of thousands of people demonstrating for clean elections and an end to corrupt postcommunist regimes led many observers to declare that the so-called color revolutions had finally brought democracy to Serbia, Georgia, Ukraine, and Kyrgyztan. But how successful have these electoral revolutions actually been? The authors analyze all cases of electoral revolutions worldwide since 1991, distinguishing between failed and successful electoral revolutions, to conclude that even successful electoral revolutions have shown insignificant or no democratic progress in their wake. Electoral revolutions are ineffective at advancing democratization because they place too great an emphasis on elections themselves and do not address other fundamental obstacles to democratization in hybrid and authoritarian regimes. International influences have proven more successful in promoting democratization in countries of postcommunist Europe. - Reproduced. aDemocratization aProtest movements aElections aOrenstein, Mitchell A. aComparative Political Studies