Journal article

Monitoring Democracy in the Eastern Neighbourhood: When Are the EU's Assessments Lenient and Why?


Authors listBadalyan, Lusine

Publication year2022

Pages1263-1291

JournalEast European Politics and Societies

Volume number36

Issue number4

ISSN0888-3254

eISSN1533-8371

Open access statusHybrid

DOI Linkhttps://doi.org/10.1177/08883254211018735

PublisherSAGE Publications


Abstract
How reliable are the EU's reports when assessing its Eastern neighbouring countries' progress towards democracy? To explore this question, I first developed an original scale that enables to identify the variation in the quality of the EU's assessment reports across the partner countries and over time. Subsequently, by employing both quantitative and qualitative research techniques, I carried out a systematic analysis of the key structural factors that tend to influence and compromise the quality of the EU's assessments. The main results of the study suggest that the more dependent partner countries are on the EU as a source of development aid and export market, the less lenient the EU's institutions appear in their assessment reports. Furthermore, the findings of the study show that somewhat counter-intuitively, the more authoritarian the regime in question is, the less willing the EU appears in criticizing the country's poor democratic performance. However, when a certain level of political liberalization is underway, the EU institutions become rather critical in their assessment reports by explicitly and openly denouncing the country's poor democratic performance.



Citation Styles

Harvard Citation styleBadalyan, L. (2022) Monitoring Democracy in the Eastern Neighbourhood: When Are the EU's Assessments Lenient and Why?, East European Politics and Societies, 36(4), pp. 1263-1291. https://doi.org/10.1177/08883254211018735

APA Citation styleBadalyan, L. (2022). Monitoring Democracy in the Eastern Neighbourhood: When Are the EU's Assessments Lenient and Why?. East European Politics and Societies. 36(4), 1263-1291. https://doi.org/10.1177/08883254211018735



Keywords


COHESIVENESSdemocracy measurementsDEMOCRACY PROMOTIONEuropean Neighbourhood PolicyleniencyVOICE

Last updated on 2025-10-06 at 11:45