2013
DOI: 10.1080/00085006.2013.11092742
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The Role of European Union Integration in Post-Communist Democratization in Bulgaria and Macedonia

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Cited by 3 publications
(1 citation statement)
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“…First, in Bulgaria, some people became more politically active within the national political system; second, some people became more active on a European level and less active on a national level; and third, some people became politically less active. In Macedonia, some of the informants accepted the asymmetrical power relationship with Brussels and were ready to make all necessary concessions to successfully join the EU while others asserted their national identity and rejected power asymmetry with the EU (see for details MITROPOLITSKI, 2013MITROPOLITSKI, , 2014. [12] …”
Section: Methodological Choicesmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…First, in Bulgaria, some people became more politically active within the national political system; second, some people became more active on a European level and less active on a national level; and third, some people became politically less active. In Macedonia, some of the informants accepted the asymmetrical power relationship with Brussels and were ready to make all necessary concessions to successfully join the EU while others asserted their national identity and rejected power asymmetry with the EU (see for details MITROPOLITSKI, 2013MITROPOLITSKI, , 2014. [12] …”
Section: Methodological Choicesmentioning
confidence: 99%