Institutional exclusion as a destabilizing factor: the mass unrest of 1 July 2008 in Mongolia |
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Authors: | Anton Oleinik |
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Affiliation: | 1. Department of Sociology , Memorial University of Newfoundland , St. John's , NL , Canada;2. Central Economics and Mathematics Institute of the Russian Academy of Sciences , Moscow , Russia |
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Abstract: | The paper discusses the 1 July 2008 mass protest in Mongolia. This event has no precedent in Mongolian history and represents a challenge for the social sciences as neither scholars nor political leaders predicted or even admitted its eventuality. Several forms of exclusion – economic, social and institutional – are considered as its potential source. It is argued that the theory of institutional exclusion allows making better sense of the situation. Institutional exclusion means the alienation of ordinary people from government and their inability to rely on the law and official procedures when being engaged in everyday activities. Two sources of primary data inform the analysis: a series of structured interviews with the protesters (N?=?20) and a collection of visual records made during the unrest (N?=?244). The data were processed using methods of both qualitative and quantitative content analysis. |
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Keywords: | institutional exclusion hour-glass society Mongolia mass protests contested elections |
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