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In this book, Joanna Rak explores sources of civil disorder in one of the pandemic-ridden regions of the European Union, the post-communist states. Supported by systematic empirical evidence of protest policing in the region, Rak delves into conditions of civil disorder in each state to test the hypotheses and offer an explanation.



As public order policing become more prominently widespread so is the need to better explain why some instances of collective action transform into civil disorder. In this book, Joanna Rak advances a middle-range theory to better explain the sources of civil disorder in one of the pandemic-ridden regions of the European Union, the post-communist states. 

Supported by systematic empirical evidence of protest policing in 11 countries in the region, Rak delves analytically into conditions of civil disorder in each state to test the hypotheses and offer an explanation. The analysis begins by discussing the demonstration events from the Armed Conflict Location and Event Data Project database. She then identifies conditions of civil disorder development for each demonstration event, including police partisanship, the dimensions of protest policing, and the aggregate model of protest policing. The comparative analysis sheds light on the conditions under which collective action transforms into civil disorder and the outcomes vital for managing the relationship between law enforcement and public gatherings in a way that ensures the safe practice of civil rights.

Pandemic-Era Civil Disorder in Post-Communist EU Member States offers a thought-provoking and nuanced understanding of civil order and democratic struggles in the region and will interest students and researchers of comparative politics, contentious politics, democratic theory, civil society, and post-communism.

Part 1: Introduction

1. Towards Understanding of Civil Disorder during the Pandemic

2. Exploring Conditions of Civil Disorder Development: Theoretical
Foundations

Part 2: Case Studies

3. Estonian Proactive Policing: Negotiated Management and Neutrality to
Service of Civil Disorder Prevention

4. Unintended Consequences of Hybrid Protest Policing in Latvia

5. Lithuania Leveraging Negotiated Management and Non-Partisan Policing

6. Poland: Application of Partisan Policing and Negotiated Management in the
Face of Civil Disorder

7. Czech Law Enforcement and the Benefits of Neutrality and Limited
Intervention

8. Slovakia: Detentions, Force, and the Shift from Peaceful Protest to Civil
Disorder

9. The Role of Hungarian Predictable Negotiated Management and Non-Partisan
Policing in Maintaining Peaceful Protests

10. Inconsistent Law Enforcement in Romania: Civil Disorder Under Force-,
Management-Based Hybrid, and Escalated Force Protest Policing

11. The Impact of Hidden Partisanship and Countermovement Violence Policing
on the Dynamics of Civil Disorder in Bulgaria

12. Civil Disorder Dynamics in Slovenia: Protest Policing Resistant to
Political Influences

13. Cohesive Law Enforcement: Sustaining Peaceful Protests through Negotiated
Management and Apolitical Policing in Croatia

Part 3: Conclusions

14. Causal Relationships between Protest Policing and Civil Disorder in
Post-communist European Union Member States during the Pandemic
Joanna Rak is Associate Professor of Political Sciences at the Faculty of Political Science and Journalism of Adam Mickiewicz University (Pozna, Poland). She is the principal investigator of the research project Civil Disorder in Pandemic-ridden European Union, financed by the National Science Centre, Poland. The laureate of the Barbara Skarga Scholarship, the START Scholarship by the Foundation for Polish Science, and the POLITYKA Scientific Awards.