Abstract

With the end of the Cold War, the effort to exist in the international system has revealed the need to accelerate the democratization process and create new political structures by internalizing Western systems. The formation of democracy and modernization in societies belongs to different realities of political cultures. This does not mean that every state will advance the democratization process linearly because of the cyclical changes, and the political culture codes and Cultural structures of that country. This study examines the post-Cold War Poland and Hungary, while focusing developments and constitutional steps in the democratization process. The change in the historical process experienced by the two countries will be examined in the post-Cold War era and will be explained through the mehter democratization conceptualization. The study assumes that the adoption of democracy and the progress called democracy is not suitable for uniformization. On the contrary, it establishes a structure knitted with differences. In this respect, as a different conceptualization, Mehter democratization was chosen.

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