My main complaint about these well-crafted volumes is that they were not expanded to include case studies of Belarus, Bosnia-Herzegovina, Estonia, Macedonia, Moldova, Mongolia, and the countries of Central Asia and the South Caucasus.
2.
John T. Ishiyama, “Communist Parties in Transition: Structures, Leaders, and Processes of Democratization in Eastern Europe,”Comparative Politics27, 2 (January 1995): 146-166.
3.
Denise V. Powers and James H. Cox, “Echoes from the Past: The Relationship between Satisfaction with Economic Reforms and Voting Behavior in Poland,”American Political Science Review91, 3 (September 1997): 617-633.
4.
Shale Horowitz, “War after Communism: Effects on Political and Economic Reform in the Former Soviet Union and Yugoslavia,”Journal of Peace Research40, 1 (January 2003): 25-48.
5.
Jeffrey S. Kopstein and David A. Reilly, “Geographic Diffusion and the Transformation of the Post-Communist World,”World Politics53, 1 (October 2000): 1-37.