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  • Competitive elections and the challenges of the concept of competitiveness
    37-52
    Views:
    60

    The paper relates to the literature on contemporary non-democratic systems with multi-party elections. It aims to prove that electoral competitiveness is a key concept for understanding these systems, but this concept is currently underdeveloped. It first reviews the main approaches of competition and competitiveness, then, using the widely accepted type of competitive authoritarian hybrid regime, argues that the concept developed by its inventors does not provide sufficient support to detect competitiveness, because the factor of uncertainty used by the concept creators to justify its existence is not accompanied by any real indicators. The conclusion of the article is that competitiveness should therefore be derived not from the unidentifiable uncertainty factor, but from the concept of electoral integrity, which indicates the existence or the absence of genuine (competitive) elections, and from the concept and characteristics of electoral manipulations.

  • Hybrid regimes and the grey zone: new answers to fundamental problems in the study of political regimes
    42-59
    Views:
    21

    Contrary to widely held expectations, the third wave of democratization has brought about not
    only democracy but also the emergence of many regimes of whichtraditional democratic theory
    cannot make sense. The overwhelmingly dichotomous, teleological, and minimalist approaches
    fail to adequately describe political regimes in the grey zone between outright autocracy and
    full-fledged democracy. In our essay, we discuss the theoretical approaches that aim to grasp
    what has been increasingly called hybrid regimes, namely political regimes that combine
    autoritharian and democratic elements. We point to the theoretical and empirical limitations
    of these efforts and argue that the concept of hybrid regimes is still inextricably linked with the
    concept of liberal democracy. Nevertheless, even if the existing approaches to hybrid regimes
    suffer from a series of shortcomings, by providing fine-grained and more realistic descriptions of regime transformations, they make an important contribution to the literature on political
    regimes.