Armenia’s 2018 Velvet Revolution is a historic opportunity for democratic development, a new analysis suggests. Popular protests led by Nikol Pashinian dislodged the country’s kleptocratic ruling elite, and a new government that promised sweeping domestic reforms was elected at the year’s end. These protests drew on a long history of civil society and opposition organizing in Armenia, in particular postelection protests in 2008, which the government dispersed with violence.
In the April 2019 issue of the Journal of Democracy, the National Endowment for Democracy’s Elspeth Suthers and Miriam Lanskoy consider the enormous challenges the new government faces as it begins to contemplate reforming a system based on corruption and injustice, while still balancing Armenia’s foreign-policy commitments and security concerns.
“The Armenian experience underscores that protests are not merely fleeting outbursts that relieve the pressure on a dysfunctional system. . . . they generate leaders, encourage young people to keep questioning the political elite, and foster collaboration among members of civil society,” they observe. DOWNLOAD THE FULL ARTICLE HERE (PDF)
The US Department of State Bureau of Democracy, Human Rights and Labor (DRL) has issued a Notice of Funding Opportunity (NOFO): DRL Supporting Rule of Law in Armenia.