This article is the first to study the positive correlation between nationalism and democratic revolutions using Ukraine’s 2004 Orange Revolution as a case study. The Orange Revolution mobilized the largest number of participants of any democratic revolution and lasted the longest, 17 days. But, the Orange Revolution was also the most regionally divided of democratic revolutions with western and central Ukrainians dominating the protestors and eastern Ukrainians opposing the protests. The civic nationalism that underpinned the Orange Revolution is rooted in Ukraine’s path dependence that has made civil society stronger in western Ukraine where Austro-Hungarian rule permitted the emergence of a Ukrainian national identity that was stymied in eastern Ukraine by the Tsarist empire.
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September 2010
Research Article|
August 16 2010
Nationalism, identity and civil society in Ukraine: Understanding the Orange Revolution Available to Purchase
Communist and Post-Communist Studies (2010) 43 (3): 285–296.
Citation
Taras Kuzio; Nationalism, identity and civil society in Ukraine: Understanding the Orange Revolution. Communist and Post-Communist Studies 1 September 2010; 43 (3): 285–296. doi: https://doi.org/10.1016/j.postcomstud.2010.07.001
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