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Volumn 59, Issue 1, 2000, Pages 42-72

Democracy from below? Interest groups in Georgian society

(1)  Jones, Stephen F a  

a NONE

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EID: 0005468868     PISSN: 00376779     EISSN: None     Source Type: Journal    
DOI: 10.2307/2696904     Document Type: Article
Times cited : (16)

References (113)
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    • Georgia: A Failed Democratic Transition
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    • For a discussion of the pre-1995 period, see Stephen Jones, "Georgia: A Failed Democratic Transition," in Ian Bremmer and Ray Taras, eds., New States, New Politics: Building the Post-Soviet Nations (Cambridge, Eng., 1997), 505-43.
    • (1997) New States, New Politics: Building the Post-Soviet Nations , pp. 505-543
    • Jones, S.1
  • 2
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    • Cambridge, Eng., esp. chaps. 3 and 4
    • Adam Przeworski, Democracy and the Market: Political and Economic Reforms in Eastern Europe and Latin America (Cambridge, Eng., 1991), esp. chaps. 3 and 4. Przeworski concludes that one of the important conditions for democratic consolidation in postcommunist societies is the minimization of social costs during the transition. In his view, "bitter pill" policies are more likely to lead to disillusionment, vacillation in economic policies, and destabilization.
    • (1991) Democracy and the Market: Political and Economic Reforms in Eastern Europe and Latin America
    • Przeworski, A.1
  • 3
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    • Stanford
    • For an important and often neglected discussion of the relationship of global forces to the establishment and sustainability of democracies at home, see David Held, Democracy and the Global Order: From the Modern State to Cosmopolitan Governance (Stanford, 1995). Held argues that "national democracies require an international cosmopolitan democracy if they are to be sustained and developed in the contemporary era" (23).
    • (1995) Democracy and the Global Order: From the Modern State to Cosmopolitan Governance
    • Held, D.1
  • 4
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    • note
    • In a 1998 survey by Georgian Opinion Research Business International for the World Bank and the United States Agency for International Development, the Georgian public viewed parliament, provincial authorities, local municipalities, and the presidential apparatus as the top four most corrupt institutions. On a scale of 1-5 with 1 being very honest and 5 very dishonest, parliament scored 3.63, provincial authorities 3.6, local municipalities 3.58, and the presidential apparatus 3.45. Religious institutions were perceived as the most honest at 2.36. In the same survey, public officials estimated that more than one-third of customs inspectors and between 27 and 30 percent of tax inspectors and police paid for their positions. The author has a copy of the preliminary results of this survey.
  • 5
    • 0002654608 scopus 로고    scopus 로고
    • What Russia Teaches Us Now: How Weak States Threaten Freedom
    • July-August
    • Stephen Holmes "What Russia Teaches Us Now: How Weak States Threaten Freedom," The American Prospect 30, no. 33 (July-August 1997): 30-39.
    • (1997) The American Prospect , vol.30 , Issue.33 , pp. 30-39
    • Holmes, S.1
  • 6
    • 0003399018 scopus 로고    scopus 로고
    • Galbraith is cited in Held, Democracy and the Global Order, 253n1. In a society where so much economic activity is unrecorded and where statistical information is unreliable, 65 percent may not be completely accurate. A detailed report based on a survey of 1,205 households and conducted by the European Community Humanitarian Office in 1996 suggested that 71.5 percent of households in urban areas and 41.9 percent in rural areas were below the official poverty line.
    • Democracy and the Global Order
    • Held1
  • 8
    • 0004120298 scopus 로고    scopus 로고
    • Tbilisi
    • In 1996, the World Bank, using a lower physical survival minimum than the Georgian government, estimated that 35 percent of households were at or below the poverty line. Human Development Report: Georgia 1997 (Tbilisi, 1997), 17.
    • (1997) Human Development Report: Georgia 1997 , pp. 17
  • 11
    • 0003553843 scopus 로고
    • Norman
    • The debates on the appropriate institutional, economic, and legislative forms of transition to the market and political democracy have been raging for years. Holmes, Held, and Przeworski are important contributors to the debate. See also Samuel P. Huntington, The Third Wave: Democratization in the Late Twentieth Century (Norman, 1991);
    • (1991) The Third Wave: Democratization in the Late Twentieth Century
    • Huntington, S.P.1
  • 14
    • 0003887509 scopus 로고
    • Larry Diamond and Marc F. Plattner, eds., Baltimore
    • Larry Diamond and Marc F. Plattner, eds., The Global Resurgence of Democracy (Baltimore, 1993);
    • (1993) The Global Resurgence of Democracy
  • 15
    • 1942462742 scopus 로고    scopus 로고
    • Mary Ellen Fischer, ed., Boulder, Colo.
    • Mary Ellen Fischer, ed., Establishing Democracies (Boulder, Colo., 1996);
    • (1996) Establishing Democracies
  • 17
    • 0012678861 scopus 로고    scopus 로고
    • The False Dawn of Civil Society
    • 22 February
    • For an interesting challenge to western academic conventions on civil society and its relationship to the state and democracy, see David Rieff, "The False Dawn of Civil Society," The Nation, 22 February 1999, 11-16.
    • (1999) The Nation , pp. 11-16
    • Rieff, D.1
  • 19
    • 0003443840 scopus 로고    scopus 로고
    • Princeton, esp. chap. 5
    • Robert Putnam, in his study of Italian political culture, suggests that, rather than a middle class generating civil society, elements of civil society generate an effective business environment, which in turn creates the basis for democratic growth. See Robert D. Putnam with Robert Leonardi and Raffaela Y. Nanetti, Making Democracy Work: Civic Traditions in Modern Italy (Princeton, 1993), esp. chap. 5.
    • (1993) Making Democracy Work: Civic Traditions in Modern Italy
    • Putnam, R.D.1    Leonardi, R.2    Nanetti, R.Y.3
  • 20
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    • Governance, the World Bank and Liberal Theory
    • March
    • For an excellent assessment of World Bank activities over the last few years and its shift toward civic building projects, see David Williams and Tom Young, "Governance, the World Bank and Liberal Theory," Political Studies 42, no. 1 (March 1994): 84-100.
    • (1994) Political Studies , vol.42 , Issue.1 , pp. 84-100
    • Williams, D.1    Young, T.2
  • 22
    • 52849139791 scopus 로고    scopus 로고
    • 19 June
    • A good example, perhaps, is the Russian government's recent decision (in June 1998) to create a special council of the most successful businessmen to advise on the government's economic policy. See RFE/RL Newsline 2, no. 117, pt. 1 (19 June 1998).
    • (1998) RFE/RL Newsline , vol.2 , Issue.117 PART. 1
  • 23
    • 85047182802 scopus 로고
    • Interest Groups and the Policymaking Process: Sources of Countervailing Power in America
    • Mark P. Petracca, ed., Boulder, Colo.
    • For a discussion of the works of "plural elitists," such as Mancur Olson and Grant McConnell, who believed that the special interests of a few organized groups controlled policy making in their particular spheres of activity, see Andrew S. McFarland, "Interest Groups and the Policymaking Process: Sources of Countervailing Power in America," in Mark P. Petracca, ed., The Politics of Interests: Interest Groups Transformed (Boulder, Colo., 1992), 58-79.
    • (1992) The Politics of Interests: Interest Groups Transformed , pp. 58-79
    • McFarland, A.S.1
  • 24
    • 52849128638 scopus 로고    scopus 로고
    • note
    • By traditional interests, I mean noninstitutional ones such as family, kin, and clan. These are common in established liberal democracies, too, though less prevalent.
  • 25
    • 85047186913 scopus 로고    scopus 로고
    • The Rediscovery of Interest Group Politics
    • Petracca, ed.
    • For a discussion of the variety, see Marc P. Petracca, "The Rediscovery of Interest Group Politics," in Petracca, ed., Politics of Interests, 3-31.
    • Politics of Interests , pp. 3-31
    • Petracca, M.P.1
  • 27
    • 0003728134 scopus 로고
    • Allan J. Cigler and Burdett A. Loomis, eds., Washington D.C.
    • Allan J. Cigler and Burdett A. Loomis, eds., Interest Group Politics, 4th ed. (Washington D.C., 1995);
    • (1995) Interest Group Politics, 4th Ed.
  • 29
    • 0003867933 scopus 로고
    • Boston
    • Jeffrey M. Berry refers to an interest group as "an organized body of individuals who share some goals and who try to influence public policy." See Berry, The Interest Group Society (Boston, 1984), 5. My definition is broader for it includes unorganized or semiorganized associations.
    • (1984) The Interest Group Society , pp. 5
    • Berry1
  • 30
    • 0005941391 scopus 로고
    • Interest Parties: The Thin Line between Groups and Parties in the Israeli Electoral Process
    • Kay Lawson, ed., Westport
    • For a good discussion of the ambiguity of interest groups, see Yael Yishai, "Interest Parties: The Thin Line between Groups and Parties in the Israeli Electoral Process," in Kay Lawson, ed., How Political Parties Work: Perspectives from Within (Westport, 1994), 197-225.
    • (1994) How Political Parties Work: Perspectives from Within , pp. 197-225
    • Yishai, Y.1
  • 31
    • 52849084460 scopus 로고    scopus 로고
    • 5 February
    • See, for example, the accusation of the Georgian Labor Party that the IMF is undermining Georgian sovereignty by destroying its domestic industry. Parlament'is Uts'qebani, no. 3-4 (5 February 1997), 3.
    • (1997) Parlament'is Uts'qebani , Issue.3-4 , pp. 3
  • 32
    • 0004120298 scopus 로고    scopus 로고
    • Tbilisi
    • The constitution can be found in Annex 1 of United Nations Development Program, Human Development Report: Georgia 1996 (Tbilisi, 1996).
    • (1996) Human Development Report: Georgia 1996
  • 33
    • 85023983244 scopus 로고    scopus 로고
    • Georgia's Return from Chaos
    • October
    • Article 26 deals specifically with the right to join associations, form trade unions, and create political parties. Some of the ideas expressed in this section can be found in my article "Georgia's Return from Chaos," Current History 95, no. 603 (October 1996): 340-45.
    • (1996) Current History , vol.95 , Issue.603 , pp. 340-345
  • 34
    • 52849124292 scopus 로고    scopus 로고
    • note
    • The 1995 electoral law created a dual system of party lists and first past the post (150 elected by the former and 85 by the latter). In addition to the three major parties, there are a few representatives from parties elected by the first-past-the-post system. The Socialist party (which leads the Majoritarian faction) and the Labor party have parliamentary groups of 10 and 15, respectively. There are nine official "factions" in parliament, though only four or five could be described as oppositionist. Even combined, these factions cannot summon enough votes to seriously challenge the ruling party, the Citizens' Union of Georgia (CUG). The October 1999 elections, of course, will lead to changes in parliamentary composition.
  • 35
    • 52849103218 scopus 로고
    • Georgian Elections
    • Winter
    • For a report on the November 1995 elections, see Darrell Slider, "Georgian Elections," Caspian Crossroads, no. 4 (Winter 1995-1996): 15-17. The 5 percent barrier meant 62 percent of voters voting for party lists were unrepresented in parliament.
    • (1995) Caspian Crossroads , Issue.4 , pp. 15-17
    • Slider, D.1
  • 36
    • 52849095474 scopus 로고    scopus 로고
    • Ghia Nodia, ed., Tbilisi
    • The Greens, and in particular the party's leading figure, Zurab Zhvania, were instrumental in creating the CUG in 1993. This party supports Edvard Shevardnadze and is currently the largest party in parliament. A list of parliamentarians and biographies of parliamentary committee members can be found at http://www.parliament.ge (consulted 11 November 1999). For an excellent analysis of the current parliamentary structure in Georgia and party representation, see also Ghia Nodia, ed., Sakartvelos polit'ik'uri sist'ema (Tbilisi, 1998), 66-119.
    • (1998) Sakartvelos Polit'ik'uri Sist'ema , pp. 66-119
  • 37
    • 85082040988 scopus 로고    scopus 로고
    • Adventurers or Commanders? Civil-Military Relations in Georgia since Independence
    • Constantine P. Danopoulos and Daniel Zirker, eds., Boulder, Colo.
    • For an analysis of Mkhedrioni's role in Georgian politics, see Stephen Jones, "Adventurers or Commanders? Civil-Military Relations in Georgia since Independence," in Constantine P. Danopoulos and Daniel Zirker, eds., Civil-Military Relations in the Soviet and Yugoslav Successor States (Boulder, Colo., 1996), 35-52.
    • (1996) Civil-Military Relations in the Soviet and Yugoslav Successor States , pp. 35-52
    • Jones, S.1
  • 38
    • 52849133443 scopus 로고    scopus 로고
    • note
    • A nationwide unpublished survey conducted by the World Bank's Economic Development Institute and Tbilisi State University's Department of Geography (EDI-TSU) in August 1996 entitled "Public Opinion about the Social-Economic Situation in Georgia," found that only 18.4 percent of the population had a very or somewhat favorable view of parliament, 44 percent had a somewhat unfavorable or unfavorable attitude, and the remainder either claimed insufficient knowledge or answered that they had neither a favorable nor an unfavorable view (the author has a copy of the survey). The large turnout may be partly explained by a sympathy vote for Shevardnadze and his party, the CUG, in the aftermath of the August assassination attempt. An unpublished manuscript by Vicki Hesli and Merab Pachulia based on their own public opinion survey suggests that during the period following the assassination attempt, support for the CUG increased, while it decreased for the three still divided communist parties that were participating in the elections. See Hesli and Pachulia, "Party Strength as a Function of Political and Social Crisis in Georgia" (unpublished manuscript in author's possession). Merab Pachulia was chairman of the board of the Georgian Institute of Public Opinion, now the Georgian Opinion Research Business International. He was interviewed by the author for this project, Tbilisi, July 1996.
  • 39
    • 52849122817 scopus 로고    scopus 로고
    • note
    • This view was reiterated to me by P'aat'a Sakverilidze, chief of the NDP party apparatus, in an interview, Tbilisi, August 1998. His assertion is reflected by the party's membership, which has an average age of 30-35, but whether that pattern is repeated in the population at large is still unclear.
  • 40
    • 52849095178 scopus 로고    scopus 로고
    • note
    • In an interview with the author (Tbilisi, May 1996), Lana Ghoghoberidze, chairman of the majority group in parliament (CUG, Imedi, and Mamuli factions, not the same as the "Majoritarian" faction) mentioned a figure of 100,000 for the CUG, although this is obviously a broad definition of membership. Beso Jugheli, an NDP representative, claimed 6,000 for his party in an interview, Tbilisi, July 1996. Sakverilidze claimed 10,000 in the interview cited above, although he admitted only 4,500 could be considered "real" members who regularly paid their dues. Vakht'ang Rcheulishvili, leader of the Socialist party, claimed 50,000 members in an interview, Tbilisi, August 1998.
  • 41
    • 52849115669 scopus 로고    scopus 로고
    • Tbilisi, n.d.
    • See, for example, the political platform of the Labor party parliamentary faction at http://server.parliament.ge/GOVERNANCE/parl/L_A/S_P/FAC/fac3.html and the Majoritarian faction at http://server.parliament.ge/GOVERNANCE/parl/L_A/ S_P/ FAC/major2.html (consulted 11 November 1999). Despite considerable similarities in the party programs (for example, all stress the importance of a prosperous middle class, a free market, and the inviolability of private property), the Socialist and Labor parties are beginning to differentiate themselves from the NDP and CUG by stressing active government intervention in the economy, a more egalitarian policy on wages, better employment, and an immediate improvement in living standards. See Sotsialist'uri p'art'ia: Dziritadi p'rinitsip'ebi (Tbilisi, n.d.). This is a draft version of the Socialist party program given to me by its chairman, Vakht'ang Rcheulishvili. In an interview with me (Tbilisi, August 1998), Rcheulishvili blamed Shevardnadze for poor Georgian-Russian relations and subservience to the IMF. Rcheulishvili advocates a "semi-protectionist" industrial policy for Georgia and a fairer redistribution of wealth.
    • Sotsialist'uri P'art'ia: Dziritadi P'Rinitsip'ebi
  • 42
    • 52849105584 scopus 로고    scopus 로고
    • The Obstacle Course - The Citizens' Union Has Failed to Become a Governing Party
    • (a monthly analytical media digest) June
    • See "The Obstacle Course - The Citizens' Union Has Failed to Become a Governing Party," Georgian Profile (a monthly analytical media digest) 1, no. 6 (June 1996): 10-11.
    • (1996) Georgian Profile , vol.1 , Issue.6 , pp. 10-11
  • 43
    • 52849107389 scopus 로고    scopus 로고
    • The Chronicle
    • June
    • "The Chronicle," Georgian Profile, 1, no. 6 (June 1996): 4. The regional members of parliament were particularly concerned that appointed governors had the power to replace local officials with representatives from their own networks, often from Tbilisi, who had little local knowledge.
    • (1996) Georgian Profile , vol.1 , Issue.6 , pp. 4
  • 44
    • 52849124293 scopus 로고    scopus 로고
    • note
    • For example, the recent judicial reform of June 1997 (law on general courts) designed to increase the autonomy of judges with strict new examinations (except for those already in the Supreme Court) and the battle over the appointment of new ministers following a mass ministerial purge in July 1998 caused considerable divisions within the CUG and resentment among conservatives over the reformers' growing influence.
  • 45
    • 52849117726 scopus 로고    scopus 로고
    • note
    • The local government law, which was supported by the CUG, does its best to ensure continued CUG dominance. Most district and regional governors are appointed by Shevardnadze, many of whom are drawn from the CUG, and there is a 5 percent hurdle for all locally elected councils (sakrebulo) in areas with a population greater than 20,000. This is going to make it hard for new challengers to the CUG, which appointed Nik'o Lek'ishvili, former state minister and a rich businessman with extensive connections to the regions, as chief fund-raiser and election coordinator.
  • 46
    • 52849110179 scopus 로고    scopus 로고
    • 5 November
    • All figures in this section and in the rest of the article, unless otherwise indicated, refer to the 1995-99 parliament. New elections took place on 31 October 1999. Preliminary results suggest the CUG has increased its majority. In 1995, 23 percent of the voters supported the CUG. In 1999, it is estimated that 42 percent did so. Even before the runoffs scheduled for 21 November, the CUG has secured an absolute majority of the 235 seats. RFE/RL Caucasus Report 2, no. 44 (5 November 1999).
    • (1999) RFE/RL Caucasus Report , vol.2 , Issue.44
  • 47
    • 52849118943 scopus 로고    scopus 로고
    • note
    • The CUG failed to gain an absolute majority in half of the electoral districts and lost the important cities of Tbilisi, Kutaisi, Rustavi, and Senaki to opposition coalitions.
  • 48
    • 52849129448 scopus 로고    scopus 로고
    • note
    • Currently, Georgia consists of twelve large administrative regions, including the former Autonomous Republic of Abkhazia and the Autonomous Republic of Ach'ara (Adzharia). Based on historical units of the Middle Ages, there are significant economic and cultural differences between them. The Samegrelo-Zemo Svaneti region, for example, contains mostly Svans and Mingrelians who speak their own languages at home as well as Georgian. Although ethnically Georgian, Ach'ara is up to 50 percent Muslim. Historically, there has been a divide between the eastern and western districts of the country. Before the nineteenth century, when Russia began to annex Georgian territories, both western and eastern Georgia were influenced by Byzantium; in the west, the Ottoman world had significant influence, too, but in the cast, Iran was stronger.
  • 49
    • 52849130669 scopus 로고    scopus 로고
    • note
    • Much of the data on the Union is based on interviews with prominent members such as Gogi Topadze (Tbilisi, July 1996), Beso Jugheli (Tbilisi, July 1996), Zurab Tqmeladze (Tbilisi, July 1996), and officials or parliamentarians who have dealings with them, such as Lado P'ap'ava, minister of the economy (Tbilisi, July 1996); Davit Onoprishvili, chairman of the parliamentary Committee on Economic Policy and Reforms (Tbilisi, July 1996 and August 1998); and other informants in Georgian administrative structures. Topadze's claims concerning 15-20 parliamentary representatives were contradicted by both Davit Onoprishvili and Beso Jugheli (president of the Union) who put the number at 5-10 and 3, respectively.
  • 50
    • 52849090441 scopus 로고    scopus 로고
    • note
    • Beso Jugheli, member of parliament and Union member, confirmed that the Union financed his electoral campaign. Interview with Beso Jugheli, Tbilisi, July 1996.
  • 51
    • 52849092475 scopus 로고    scopus 로고
    • note
    • In 1996, Shadman-Valavi was division chief of the European Department 2, Southern Division.
  • 52
    • 52849091584 scopus 로고    scopus 로고
    • "A Country, Capitalist in Form, Socialist in Content," "Concessions Will Kill Georgia's Economy," and "a Tax Cut - That's What We Want,"
    • three Georgian newspaper articles reprinted in May
    • For assessments of this meeting by union members and their opponents, see "A Country, Capitalist in Form, Socialist in Content," "Concessions Will Kill Georgia's Economy," and "A Tax Cut - That's What We Want," three Georgian newspaper articles reprinted in Georgian Profile 1, no. 5 (May 1996): 12-15.
    • (1996) Georgian Profile , vol.1 , Issue.5 , pp. 12-15
  • 53
    • 52849085297 scopus 로고    scopus 로고
    • note
    • I interviewed the directors of two of the largest manufacturing combines: Nik'o Tskhak'aia of Samto-Kimia (chemical production) in Tbilisi, August 1996; Vakht'ang Ch'eishvili of the Rustavi Metallurgical combine in Rustavi, August 1996; and Avtandil Lobshanidze, deputy commercial director of Azot (a sulfur and ammonia producing concern in Rustavi) in Rustavi, August 1996.
  • 54
    • 52849117185 scopus 로고    scopus 로고
    • note
    • Many of these firms would go bankrupt without government credit. Salary debts of the 15 largest enterprises were $10 million in 1996.
  • 55
    • 52849090121 scopus 로고    scopus 로고
    • note
    • This was the argument of Nik'o Tskhak'aia, director of Samto-Kimia, a major chemical concern in Tbilisi.
  • 56
    • 52849105873 scopus 로고    scopus 로고
    • Despite such opposition, at a meeting of the President's Economic Council on 8 December 1996 it was decided to halve the excise rate on alcoholic beverages; the tax on jewelry was reduced three times. This suggests that the union's campaign paid off. See Economy Reforms Information Center at the State Chancellery of Georgia, 12 December weekly information bulletin, at http://www.sanet.ge/ecoinf/index/html (consulted December 1997). For more detailed figures on Georgia's revenue collection problems, see Human Development Report: Georgia 1996, 50-53,
    • Human Development Report: Georgia 1996 , pp. 50-53
  • 57
    • 52849084467 scopus 로고    scopus 로고
    • TACIS Policy and Legal Advice Program Tbilisi, first quarter
    • and Georgian Economic Trends, TACIS Policy and Legal Advice Program (Tbilisi, first quarter 1996), 10-36. Covering only 3-4 percent of its gross domestic product in taxes in 1996 made Georgia one of the least efficient tax collectors in the world. By 1997, this was up to 7.5 percent.
    • (1996) Georgian Economic Trends , pp. 10-36
  • 58
    • 52849084168 scopus 로고    scopus 로고
    • Tbilisi, fourth quarter
    • Georgian Economic Trends (Tbilisi, fourth quarter 1997), 13.
    • (1997) Georgian Economic Trends , pp. 13
  • 60
    • 52849110464 scopus 로고    scopus 로고
    • Zviad Koridze, editor of Tbilisi, July
    • Interview with Zviad Koridze, editor of Shvidi Dghe, Tbilisi, July 1996.
    • (1996) Shvidi Dghe
  • 61
    • 52849127200 scopus 로고    scopus 로고
    • Vasik'o Maghlaperidze, editor of Tbilisi, June
    • Interview with Vasik'o Maghlaperidze, editor of K'avk'asioni, Tbilisi, June 1999.
    • (1999) K'avk'asioni
  • 62
    • 52849139479 scopus 로고    scopus 로고
    • Annotated Digest
    • June
    • See "Annotated Digest" in Georgian Profile 1, no. 6 (June 1996): 22.
    • (1996) Georgian Profile , vol.1 , Issue.6 , pp. 22
  • 63
    • 52849107388 scopus 로고    scopus 로고
    • Interview with Vasik'o Maghlaperidze, Tbilisi, June 1999
    • Interview with Vasik'o Maghlaperidze, Tbilisi, June 1999.
  • 65
    • 52849086988 scopus 로고    scopus 로고
    • note
    • In "Public Opinion about the Social-Economic Situation in Georgia," the survey conducted by Tbilisi State University's Department of Geography and the World Bank's Economic Development Institute in August 1996, 88.6 percent declared they used Georgian television as a regular source of information. Newspapers were a regular source of information for 53 percent of the respondents.
  • 66
    • 52849090440 scopus 로고    scopus 로고
    • Georgia's Remotely Controlled Television
    • October
    • For an assessment of why Rustavi Two was banned, see Elizabeth Fuller, "Georgia's Remotely Controlled Television," Transition 2, no. 21 (October 1996): 73. Rustavi Two was still operating in June 1999. The news programs of Rustavi Two and Sakartvelos Khma, the two most prominent independent stations, are generally more popular than the official news reports of the two state channels.
    • (1996) Transition , vol.2 , Issue.21 , pp. 73
    • Fuller, E.1
  • 67
    • 52849130069 scopus 로고    scopus 로고
    • A Little Belated Coverage of an Important Matter
    • February
    • See "A Little Belated Coverage of an Important Matter," Georgian Profile 1, no. 2 (February 1996): 16-17. Tamaz Lobshanidze also provided information on this issue. Interview with Tamaz Lobshanidze, deputy director of Iverbanki, Tbilisi, July 1996.
    • (1996) Georgian Profile , vol.1 , Issue.2 , pp. 16-17
  • 69
    • 52849084466 scopus 로고    scopus 로고
    • note
    • Between 1988 and 1994, Georgia's total material product (total production excluding services) declined by 80 percent, and in 1994 economic activity in the republic had declined to one-third of its 1990 level. In 1995, the government laid off one-third of its employees.
  • 70
    • 52849102619 scopus 로고    scopus 로고
    • From the Executive Board: Georgia: ESAF
    • 19 March
    • Vakht'ang Ch'eishvili, director of the Rustavi Metallurgical factory, estimated that of his 9,500 employees, approximately 5 percent actually work. For the IMF's optimistic prognoses for the Georgian economy, see "From the Executive Board: Georgia: ESAF," IMF Survey, 19 March 1996, 97-99,
    • (1996) IMF Survey , pp. 97-99
  • 71
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    • Georgia: From Hyperinflation to Growth
    • 23 September
    • and Marta de Castello Branco, "Georgia: From Hyperinflation to Growth," IMF Survey, 23 September 1996, 310-12.
    • (1996) IMF Survey , pp. 310-312
    • De Castello Branco, M.1
  • 72
    • 52849107981 scopus 로고    scopus 로고
    • Propesiuli k'avshirebis uplebata gankhortsielibisatvis khelshemts'qobis shesakheb
    • 31 January
    • Much of the information on the association comes from two interviews with its elected chairman, Irakli Tughushi, Tbilisi, July 1996 and June 1999. The order (brdzane-buloba) is "Propesiuli k'avshirebis uplebata gankhortsielibisatvis khelshemts'qobis shesakheb," Sakartvelos President'is brdzanebuloba, no. 41 (31 January 1999). A copy was given to me by Irakli Tughushi.
    • (1999) Sakartvelos President'is Brdzanebuloba , Issue.41
  • 74
    • 52849085601 scopus 로고    scopus 로고
    • note
    • This case is now in the Supreme Court (1999). Soso Katsitadze has claimed trade union property for his own breakaway trade union federation - the Amalgamation of Georgian Trade Unions.
  • 75
    • 52849120555 scopus 로고    scopus 로고
    • note
    • A survey of popular attitudes toward trade unions entitled "Trade Unions, Strike Activities and Social Security Issues in the Republic of Georgia," conducted in 1994 by the Caucasian Institute for Peace, Democracy, and Development, using a sample of 500 drawn from a wide variety of employees, concluded: "The polled confirmed that official trade unions do not play any important role in the life of society. Thirty four per cent of the poll said they were not members of any trade union, while 22% confessed they did not exactly know whether they were members of any trade union organization. Forty two per cent considered themselves to be trade union members, but only few of them have succeeded in giving the exact name of the organization they belong to." This is an unpublished survey conducted by Guram Svanidze, for the Caucasian Institute for Peace, Democracy, and Development, Tbilisi, Georgia. The author has a copy. The survey "Public Opinion about the Social-Economic Situation in Georgia," suggests that only 4.9 percent of the population had a favorable attitude toward trade union leaders, 13.4 percent unfavorable, 16.5 percent neutral, and the rest, 65.3 percent, had never heard of the leaders.
  • 76
    • 0041700990 scopus 로고    scopus 로고
    • Tbilisi, third quarter
    • Interview with Bak'ur Gulua, minister of agriculture, Tbilisi, July 1996. By contrast, Georgian Economic Trends (Tbilisi, third quarter 1996), 4, suggests that the state still owns 76 percent of agricultural land and 89 percent of all land. These low private ownership figures can be partly explained by the fact that agricultural land comprises only 43 percent of Georgia's total area and that Abkhazia and South Ossetia have remained outside the privatization program.
    • (1996) Georgian Economic Trends
  • 78
    • 0006426290 scopus 로고
    • Georgia and Soviet Nationality Policy
    • Stephen F. Cohen, Alexander Rabinowitch, and Robert Sharlet, eds., London
    • Non-Georgian minorities have always presented the Georgian government with problems. In the 1970s, for example, during Shevardnadze's tenure as Georgia's communist party boss, the Abkhazians pressured the Georgian government into numerous concessions on language instruction, educational rights, and representation within Abkhazia's executive and legislative bodies. For a discussion of this period, see Ronald Suny, "Georgia and Soviet Nationality Policy," in Stephen F. Cohen, Alexander Rabinowitch, and Robert Sharlet, eds., The Soviet Union since Stalin (London, 1980), 200-226.
    • (1980) The Soviet Union since Stalin , pp. 200-226
    • Suny, R.1
  • 80
    • 52849093650 scopus 로고    scopus 로고
    • note
    • The CUG is the party that is most sensitive to minority support; in 1995 it held a Minorities Congress.
  • 81
    • 52849130384 scopus 로고    scopus 로고
    • note
    • For example, the Armenian community secured a concession concerning the Law on the Referendum. For the first five years after the bill was passed, any referendum could be in the local language, but thereafter, by which time ethnic minorities should have learned Georgian, referendums could be in the state language only. Mouradian claimed the Armenian community had considerable input on the bill on national minorities, which has not yet been passed. Interview with Genrikh Mouradian, Tbilisi, July 1996.
  • 82
    • 52849119824 scopus 로고    scopus 로고
    • note
    • The Russian presence here, which has created a local ruble economy in Akhalkalaki and employs most of the local male Armenian population, has forced the Georgian government to adopt a particularly cautious policy. Some newspapers in the Armenian Republic have called for Akhalkalaki to be annexed to Armenia, a reminder to the Georgian government that tactless Georgianization policies could lead to another secessionist conflict.
  • 83
    • 52849085600 scopus 로고
    • The Azeris in Georgia and the Ingilos: Ethnic Minorities in the Limelight
    • On the Azeri community in Georgia, see Elizabeth Fuller, "The Azeris in Georgia and the Ingilos: Ethnic Minorities in the Limelight," Central Asian Survey 3, no. 2 (1984): 75-86.
    • (1984) Central Asian Survey , vol.3 , Issue.2 , pp. 75-86
    • Fuller, E.1
  • 84
    • 52849102332 scopus 로고    scopus 로고
    • note
    • Adilpasha Rostomogli of Birlik, the Azeri Cultural and Charitable Society in Georgia, was particularly helpful in articulating the Azeri point of view.
  • 87
    • 52849136750 scopus 로고    scopus 로고
    • note
    • The Svans and Mingrelians are regionally based Georgian groups who have maintained their own languages, which are unintelligible to other Georgians.
  • 88
    • 52849115392 scopus 로고    scopus 로고
    • note
    • Interview with the late Temur Pipia, former chief of the President's Service for Local Administration and Regional Politics, Tbilisi, July 1996.
  • 89
    • 52849110791 scopus 로고    scopus 로고
    • note
    • Such corrupt networks remain a serious problem even in the most respectable democracies, as the savings and loan scandal of the 1980s in the United States demonstrated.
  • 90
    • 79955859910 scopus 로고
    • New Haven
    • Joseph LaPalombara, Democracy, Italian Style (New Haven, 1987), 210. When reading this book, I was struck by the many similarities between Italian and Georgian politics. This book had an important influence on this article.
    • (1987) Democracy, Italian Style , pp. 210
    • LaPalombara, J.1
  • 92
    • 52849114440 scopus 로고    scopus 로고
    • Diamond and Plattner, eds.
    • For an excellent discussion of corruption and the challenges it presents to democracy, see Diamond and Plattner, eds., Global Resurgence of Democracy, 193-244.
    • Global Resurgence of Democracy , pp. 193-244
  • 94
    • 52849122816 scopus 로고    scopus 로고
    • Tbilisi
    • Much of the information gathered on the NGO community comes from interviews with activists such as Michael Clayton, former program manager of ISAR-Caucasus (Tbilisi, July 1996 and June 1997); Nik'o Melikadze, scientific director of the Strategic Research Center (Tbilisi, July 1996); Irakli Okruashvili of the Young Lawyers Association (Tbilisi, July 1996); Irakli Mch'edlishvili, P'aat'a Gurgenidze, and Ghia Nodia of the Caucasian Institute for Peace, Democracy, and Development (Tbilisi, July 1996); Vakht'ang Khmaladze of the League for the Protection of the Constitution (Tbilisi, July 1996, June 1997, and June 1998); Helen Godfrey of the European Community Humanitarian Office in Georgia (Tbilisi, July 1996); Gaioz Kubaneishvili, director of the Coordination Bureau for International Humanitarian Aid (Tbilisi, July 1996); and others. The indigenous NGO community has begun to produce its own newsletters and conference proceedings. See, for example, Grassroots, which subsequently became New Georgia, a monthly newsletter for NGOs in Georgia, supported by ISAR and the International Telecommunications and Information Center, USAID, and the Eurasia Foundation. I have also used Nino Saakashvili's Survey of the Success, Problems and Future of the Georgian NGO Sector: An Investigation Conducted on Behalf of the Charity Know-How Consultative Process (Tbilisi, 1996),
    • (1996) Survey of the Success, Problems and Future of the Georgian NGO Sector: An Investigation Conducted on Behalf of the Charity Know-How Consultative Process
    • Saakashvili, N.1
  • 98
    • 52849132169 scopus 로고    scopus 로고
    • note
    • Davit Onoprishvili of the Committee on Economic Policy and Reforms and Irakli Okruashvili of the Young Lawyers Association were particularly helpful in guiding me through NGO involvement in these bills.
  • 99
    • 52849118015 scopus 로고
    • Tbilisi, November
    • International Society for Fair Elections monitored the November 1995 elections and a November 1996 plebiscite held among internally displaced persons and refugees in Georgia from the Abkhazian conflict of 1992-93. It was not permitted, however, to monitor the September 1996 elections in the Autonomous Republic of Ach'ara, which is still under the tight control of Asian Abashidze. For the society's unfavorable report of Georgian elections, see Parliamentary and Presidential Elections in Georgia (Tbilisi, November 1995). In its final statement on these elections, the society declared, "there were serious violations of the Election [sic] law and democratic principles in a whole range of districts and precincts, which affected the fairness of the elections" (4).
    • (1995) Parliamentary and Presidential Elections in Georgia
  • 100
    • 52849095472 scopus 로고    scopus 로고
    • note
    • Michael Clayton, former program manager of ISAR-Caucasus, who was instrumental in setting up the International Center for the Reformation and Development of the Georgian Economy, reported this to me.
  • 101
    • 52849122815 scopus 로고    scopus 로고
    • Tbilisi, October
    • See International Telecommunications and Information Center, Georgian NGOs Sector: Contact Information Tbilisi (Tbilisi, October 1996), a listing of the most active indigenous NGOs in Georgia.
    • (1996) Georgian NGOs Sector: Contact Information Tbilisi
  • 102
    • 52849127488 scopus 로고    scopus 로고
    • Tbilisi, February-April
    • A 1997 survey suggested that 90 percent of Georgian NGOs surveyed had received aid from foreign foundations, either in the form of a grant, information, or training (Sakartvelos arasamtavro organizatsiata). This said, in 1997 the local NGO community is beginning to seek alternative sources of funding. Environmental groups are working with travel agencies (conservation tours) and have been commissioned by the Georgian International Oil Company to study the ecological impact of the oil pipeline from Baku in Azerbaijan to Supsa in Georgia. The route was modified partly as a consequence of this study (I am grateful to Nino Saakashvili, director of ISAR-Georgia, now Horizont'i Foundation, for this information). ISAR-Georgia's State of the Georgian NGO Sector: Brief Summary of Conclusions of the "Needs Assessment Seminar" (Tbilisi, February-April 1997) reported some instances of donations by business and certain ministries (education, environment, justice). The author has a copy of this very useful survey of Georgian NGOs and their activities published in Georgia by ISAR-Georgia.
    • (1997) ISAR-Georgia's State of the Georgian NGO Sector: Brief Summary of Conclusions of the "Needs Assessment Seminar"
  • 103
    • 52849114439 scopus 로고    scopus 로고
    • NGOs and the Law
    • Tbilisi, February-March
    • On the NGOs legal environment, see "NGOs and the Law," New Georgia 1, no. 3 (Tbilisi, February-March 1996): 3. Currently charitable organizations do not pay tax, but the definition of a charitable organization is still unclear. The civil code permits tax free status to foundations, which covers some NGOs.
    • (1996) New Georgia , vol.1 , Issue.3 , pp. 3
  • 104
    • 52849127782 scopus 로고    scopus 로고
    • August-September
    • ISAR-Georgia has set up pilot training programs for NGOs in the provincial towns of Ninots'minda and Khashuri. The ISAR-Georgia Data Sheet (August-September 1996) reports it has selected and trained local representatives in the regions of Akhaltsikhe, Gori, Kutaisi, and Chokhat'auri. In 1997 there were seventeen NGOs in the Zugdidi region and twenty-one in Khashuri.
    • (1996) ISAR-Georgia Data Sheet
  • 105
    • 52849128358 scopus 로고    scopus 로고
    • Tbilisi, 12 March
    • In Khashuri, NGOs created "Shida Kartli," an umbrella organization for local NGOs, which represents the first informational and resource center outside Tbilisi (for an assessment of NGOs in Khashuri, see ISAR-Georgia Needs Assessment Program [Tbilisi, 12 March 1997]). These are significant developments suggesting that NGOs are broadening their geographical base, although provincial NGOs are still at a considerable technical and financial disadvantage compared to Tbilisi.
    • (1997) ISAR-Georgia Needs Assessment Program
  • 106
    • 52849104700 scopus 로고    scopus 로고
    • For example, 93.75 percent of Khashuri NGOs have no technical equipment (57 percent in Tbilisi) and only 50 percent received aid from foundations (84 percent in Tbilisi: See ISAR-Georgia's State of the Georgian NGO Sector).
    • ISAR-Georgia's State of the Georgian NGO Sector
  • 107
    • 52849123395 scopus 로고    scopus 로고
    • note
    • In 1996, with the support of Japan and the United States, the Georgian government set up a Georgian Social Investment Fund that finances projects of economic, social, and environmental rehabilitation. Georgian NGOs are major candidates for such projects.
  • 108
    • 52849096387 scopus 로고    scopus 로고
    • note
    • The order (brdzanebuleba) establishing the council declares its primary aim to be "the development of cooperation between the nongovernment and state structures in order to create a civil society." "Sakartvelos sakhelmtsipo k'antselariastan arsebul arasamtavrobo organizatsiata sakonsultatsia sabch'os," no. 409, 9 July 1998.
  • 110
    • 52849130668 scopus 로고    scopus 로고
    • Spring
    • The disillusion with politics may eventually benefit the NGOs, once they are seen as nonpartisan groups that can help solve particular community problems. This was a point made by Michael Clayton in a personal communication. A good example of this is the Varketili Society, a community-based organization set up in one of Tbilisi's more deprived neighborhoods in 1995. It has established a health center and a library, controlled vagrant dogs, and successfully lobbied electrical companies and the government to restore electricity. For a fuller description of its activities, see Horizont'i, no. 3 (Spring 1998): 19-20.
    • (1998) Horizont'i , Issue.3 , pp. 19-20
  • 111
    • 52849137896 scopus 로고    scopus 로고
    • For NGO-business relations in Georgia, see Horizont'i, ibid., 7-8.
    • Horizont'i , pp. 7-8
  • 112
    • 52849117182 scopus 로고    scopus 로고
    • Thomas Dine, USAID's assistant administrator for Europe and the NIS, in his statement to the Commission for Security and Cooperation in Europe (now Organization for Security and Cooperation in Europe), declared that part of his organization's purpose was "promoting wholesale structural changes in the political, economic, and social systems." Briefing on U.S. Assistance to Central and Eastern Europe and the NIS, 39.
    • Briefing on U.S. Assistance to Central and Eastern Europe and the NIS , pp. 39
  • 113
    • 52849116271 scopus 로고    scopus 로고
    • sponsored by a group of international NGOs in Georgia
    • An example of how international NGOs can affect policy is the report by Dershem, Gzirishvili, de Roos, and Venekamp, Food, Nutrition, Health, and Nonfood Vulnerability in Georgia, sponsored by a group of international NGOs in Georgia. This report radically reassessed vulnerable groups in Georgia and showed a less dramatic, and much more complex, picture of poverty than had previously been assumed. The report raised serious questions among ministers and parliamentarians about the government's social services strategy.
    • Food, Nutrition, Health, and Nonfood Vulnerability in Georgia
    • Dershem1    Gzirishvili2    De Roos3    Venekamp4


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