Abstract

In this paper, the main reasons that led in the post-Soviet period to the process of replacing the ruling classes with the counter-elite are analyzed. In the study, using the dialectical methodology, the authors identify trends and, following them in a logical chain, explain the order of procedures for political elites’ circulation. This paper also focuses on the education factor, which significantly determines the process of formation and circulation of political elites in post-Soviet Georgia. If, in the Soviet period, one of the criteria for the formation and recruitment of local elites was local education, the trend in this direction in post-Soviet Georgia has been changed significantly. Education gained in Western, EuropeanAmerican universities has been one of the defining factors in the formation and recruitment of political elites by Georgia since its independence. However, in Georgia, mainly in Tbilisi, there are educational centers, socalled “elite schools”, the vast majority of which are attended by children of new Georgians, but according to the criteria of skills, 3-4 percent of schools accept students. This is the first phase of education for junior members of local political and powerful financial groups. The second phase is the migration of graduates of these institutions to higher education institutions of Western countries to get an education. Which makes it easier for returnees to the homeland to integrate into the elite structure. In conclusion, those criteria are set out that are necessary factors for replacing the power elite with the counter-elite.

Highlights

  • One of the main conceptual approaches in elitology is the dichotomous division of the public system, in which differentiation of any social organism is built on antithesis, elite is a mass whose moderate, balanced relations ensure the stable functioning of the public-political system [1: 38–73].The dynamics of the study of socio-political processes led V

  • Society was a system of dynamic equilibrium, in which the process of changes creates cycles for social equilibrium, the flow of which depends on the nature of the circulation of elites [3: 72–73]

  • On the basis of empirical observation on the dynamics of change and renewal of governments in post-Soviet Georgia, it has to be said that the process of replacing political leaders and elite groups mobilized around them was uneven

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Summary

Introduction

One of the main conceptual approaches in elitology is the dichotomous division of the public system, in which differentiation of any social organism is built on antithesis, elite is a mass whose moderate, balanced relations ensure the stable functioning of the public-political system [1: 38–73]. The dynamics of the study of socio-political processes led V. Pareto to a theoretical understanding of the “circulation of elite” [2: 27–28]. Society was a system of dynamic equilibrium, in which the process of changes creates cycles for social equilibrium, the flow of which depends on the nature of the circulation of elites [3: 72–73]

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