6533b7d3fe1ef96bd126080d

RESEARCH PRODUCT

After the Referendum

Ivars Ijabs

subject

Sociology and Political ScienceMilitantmedia_common.quotation_subject05 social sciences0507 social and economic geographyDirect democracyDemocracy0506 political scienceRepresentative democracyLawPolitical sciencePolitical economyReferendumEthnic democracy050602 political science & public administrationNation-building050703 geographymedia_common

description

During the years 2011–2014, Latvia experienced a significant increase in the adoption and use of militant democracy measures—constitutional amendments, refusals of party registration, restrictions on referendums and popular initiatives. These events, triggered by a widely attended referendum on the introduction of Russian as the second state language, highlighted the problematic relations between democracy and nation-building in Latvia. Despite earlier expectations that the original militancy of Latvian democracy would decrease with the gradual integration of the Russophone minority, recent developments show that the defence of a particular type of nation-building has become an integral part of Latvian democracy. Contrary to earlier attempts to describe Latvia as an example of ethnic democracy, this article argues that the nation-building proceeds on the basis of a not fully consistent combination of elements of ethnic and liberal republican approaches.

https://doi.org/10.1177/0888325415593630