Rethinking the 'Orange Revolution'
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Authors
White, Stephen
McAllister, Ian
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Taylor & Francis Group
Abstract
A national representative survey in November-December 2007 suggests that there was
little consensus about the nature of the 'Orange revolution', and that perceptions varied
considerably by region and age-group. The main reason for participation was to 'protest
against the authorities', but here too there were considerable regional differences. Eight
focus groups conducted in different parts of the country allowed participants to articulate
their distinctive interpretations of the events: an 'Orange' narrative that saw the
events of late 2004 as an authentic popular uprising, and a 'Blue' narrative that saw
them as a Western-funded coup. After the event, increasing numbers felt they had
lost rather than gained, with the gains clearest in respect of freedom of speech and
losses most marked in relations with Russia. Different views of the revolutionary
events in turn were closely associated with voting choices in the September 2007
parliamentary election.
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Rethinking the 'Coloured Revolutions'
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Restricted until
2099-12-31
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