Abstract:
A thesis submitted to obtain an ScD degree in political science according to a
specialty 23.00.02 “Political institutions and processes”. – Vasyl’ Stus Donetsk
National University, Ministry of Education and Science of Ukraine. – Vinnytsia,
2020.
The thesis researches particularity and nature of the pattern interrelations
between the political opposition and the power and defines their impact on the
democratization of the political systems of the Visegrad Group countries. The
combination of theories of social capital conversion, synergetics, fluctuation,
institutionalism and neo-institutionalism were defined as the most relevant
methodological approach. Due to the theory of social capital conversion, we have
substantiated individual and group strategies of social capital conversion clarified
the dynamics of the objective structure of the political field, the commensurability
of dispositions between the power and the opposition, and the change of their
boundaries during repositioning in each of the studied countries. The
the interrelationship between the power and the opposition is studied as a process of
accumulation, conversion, and exchange of capital in the struggle for the
metal capital of the state. The synergetic approach was applied to analyze the role
of power and opposition as determinants of fluctuation and bifurcation, qualitative
change in the state of the system in the range between chaos and order, and the
the ability of nonlinear dynamic systems to self-organize. Synergetics has helped to
establish the involvement of both the opposition and the power in the emergence
of regular and strange attractors and their use as a resource for the accumulation
of political capital. The application of this approach as a methodological tool also
helped to determine the relevant link between the application of the emergence
principle and the establishment of pattern interrelationship between the power and
the opposition.
To determine the influence of power-opposition relations on the fluctuation
of the political system during the substitution of one political force by another, we
have applied the fluctuation theorem, developed by P. Sorokin as a component of
his theory of social stratification. This approach additionally allowed to
substantiate the relationship between the opposition and the power as a struggle of
deterrence and stratification forces, to better understand the causes of fluctuations
in the profile of social stratification and to establish the determinants of bringing
the system to equilibrium. Institutional and neo-institutional approaches have
been useful to define the role of institutionalized and non-institutionalized, formal
and informal political actors in the development of specific "game rules"
regarding the distribution of state metal capital. The theory of rational choice has
helped to discover strategies of the power and the opposition in the creation of
institutions of constructive interaction in the transition period.
The research has ascertained strategies for the accumulation and conversion
of social capitals of the power and the opposition that help to understand the
differences between democratization processes; revealed the specificity of their
interrelations in each studied country, in consideration of the starting conditions,
products of democratization, practices of democratic transition, and their
indicators; the research as well identified the defining points as bifurcation
conditions for the democratization of political systems of the Visegrad Group
countries, which separate the phases of growth and decline of mutual influence
and have a decisive impact on democratization indicators.
Patterns in the interrelations between the power and the opposition as a
determinant of a system's self-organization have been identified and their
influence on the dynamics of democratization processes found. Such patterns
include loyalty/disloyalty, cooperation, compromise, constructive criticism, and
so on. One of the products of such relations is the emergence of temporary spatial
integrated structures - institutions of constructive interaction between the power
and the opposition in the form of round tables, a specific type of self-organization
of the system at the transitional stage. Round tables are considered ordinary
attractors, which determine the change of the system's transition from a chaotic to
an ordered state while changing certain parameters of the system. Their gradual
disintegration in the bifurcation phase occurred after the choice of one of the
agreed vectors of democratization development and bringing the system into a
balanced state. Further democratization of the political system was carried out
against the background of the influence of small attractors, which were generated
by imbalance, instability, and accumulation of fluctuations.
It has been proved that the patterns are products of strategies for the
accumulation and conversion of public capital, the coordinated fixation of
dispositions within the political field and habitus, implemented by political actors.
They are commensurable with the force of the poles and the conditional distance
between them. Therefore, the alteration of poles of the political field during the
repositioning provoked insignificant changes in the interrelations between the
power and the opposition. However, as for the democratization prospects, this
factor plays a significant role. Maintaining a distance that estranges the two poles
and the reproduction of political practices contributes to the emergence and
fixation of institutions of constructive interaction as forms of self-organization in
the political space, which makes it possible to predict the behavior of political
players and the political system prevents chaos and the emergence of strange
attractors and accidental fluctuations alleviate the political consequences of the
convergence of democratization processes. Thus, the democratization of the
the political system, without losing its dissipation features, is exposed to less
significant fluctuations, and, in some cases, resembles a linear process.
Pattern interrelations have manifested themselves in the reproduction of
political practices and models of political behavior in the actions of political
agents, which was accompanied by the carry-over of such phenomena as political
corruption, malpractice, clientelism, and others. Suchlike associated capital
allowed the ruling elite to quickly compensate for the costs of the election campaign
and convert political capital into economic capital as the ultimate goal of the
strategies of major social agents.
By applying a neo-institutional approach and the theory of social capital
conversion, we have proved that formal and informal rules of the "game"
established in the process of interaction between the power and opposition are
aimed mainly at preserving the ratio of political forces, disposition between the
two poles and preventing other agents from redistributing the political field,
which is achieved by artificially reducing the level of inter-party competition and
negatively affects the qualitative characteristics of democratization. Choosing a
synergetic approach as a research tool, we came to the conclusion that this
strategy is based on the principle of emergence. That is, the cumulative social
capital of two parties is always bigger than the amount of capital belonging to
each of them.
Based on the analysis of starting conditions, products, and practices of
democratic transition, institutions of constructive interaction between the power
and the opposition, and indicators, the author has developed and conceptualized a
a dynamic model of democratization of Visegrad countries with phases of
fluctuations and bifurcations, which is typical for post-communist countries. It has
been established that the processes of democratization in the Visegrad Group
countries have cycles of undirected non-periodic fluctuations conditioned by
regular and strange attractors, which emergence is to some extent stimulated by
the power and opposition and which, in turn, determines the struggle of
equalization and stratification forces.
The dynamics of democratization have non-linear nature and are resulted
by the implementation of a specific conversion strategy not only by the ruling but
the opposition elite as well. To confirm this hypothesis, the study has determined
the level of democracy in each of the studied countries in the temporal dimension,
made a cross-regional comparison and highlighted the bifurcation points of the
democratization process of the Visegrad political systems, establishing their
dependence on the distribution of state metal capital between the power and the
opposition. The determinants that diagnose changes in the trajectory of
democratic development has been defined. It has been substantiated that the
deflection from the state of equilibrium, which in ideal conditions is accompanied
by a short period of chaos, subsequently obtains organized forms and ultimately
reproduces the original state of democracy or contributes to its enhancement.
Based on this analysis, the functional role of the opposition in the alteration of the
qualitative parameters of the political system's democratization and the criteria of
effective interaction with the authorities from the standpoint of democratic
development has been determined. The study elaborated recommendations for
Ukraine to improve national practices of democratization.