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From Elections to Democracy: Building Accountable Government in Hungary and Poland. By Susan Rose-Ackerman. New York: Cambridge University Press, 2005. Pp. 272. $50.00 cloth.

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From Elections to Democracy: Building Accountable Government in Hungary and Poland. By Susan Rose-Ackerman. New York: Cambridge University Press, 2005. Pp. 272. $50.00 cloth.

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  01 January 2024

Linda M. Beale*
Affiliation:
University of Illinois
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Abstract

Type
Book Reviews
Copyright
© 2006 Law and Society Association.

Rose-Ackerman's new book tackles a significant concern—how to sustain electoral democracies in Central European countries by ensuring that government policy decisions are accountable to the people. Challenging the notion that electoral systems with competitive political parties are sufficient, Rose-Ackerman asserts that democracy requires accountable policymaking “through transparent procedures that seek to incorporate public input” (p. 1). Focusing on Hungary and Poland, she considers five institutional processes that attempt to satisfy this goal.

First, international constraints provided by the EU and organizations such as the World Bank inherently create conflicts through external pressures that override democratic, grassroots developments. The resulting legitimacy deficit limits international organizations' ability to encourage public accountability.

Second, various new or expanded independent oversight institutions function relatively well to enhance performance accountability but do little to foster policymaking accountability. These include independent agencies, constitutional courts, presidents with monitoring functions, audit offices, and ombudsmen (p. 57, Table 5.1). One suspects that this discussion discounts the policymaking roles of two institutions more than merited. The constitutional courts in Hungary and Poland play a larger role than those in the United States, since they are encouraged to address constitutional issues and provide widespread access; and the ombudsmen have not infrequently initiated policy debates in response to citizens' concerns (see, e.g., pp. 78–9 and 80–1).

Third, delegation to lower-level governments may allow some public participation. Regrettably, delegation also invites interference with national initiatives based on the personal goals of local politicians while allowing opportunistic firms to avoid national objectives by working through weaker local units that lack expertise or clear lines of authority. Public accountability is therefore weak, even though some substantive statutes require public participation before particular kinds of ordinances may be promulgated.

Finally, neocorporatism and civil dialogue similarly fail. Neocorporatism brings specific groups into policymaking, but it does so by substituting negotiation processes for ordinary policymaking. The effect is to shut out all but established insiders, such as tripartite commissions with labor, management, and government representatives. If civil dialogue functions in situations in which participating groups are weak, information is not available, consultation is too late, or policy discussions are inconclusive (as Rose-Ackerman suggests is often the case in Hungary and Poland), it does little to enhance policymaking accountability.

The failure of these four institutions leaves only one genuine possibility for policymaking accountability—reliance on open, public participation in government policymaking processes “that do not lock in a fixed set of participants and that are open to newly developing interests” (p. 137). Rose-Ackerman devotes the final chapters to a re-exploration of Poland's and Hungary's neocorporatist and civil dialogue processes. She compares them to the ideal of transparent, publicly accountable, and judicially reviewable issuance of administrative rules by U.S. agencies under the Administrative Procedures Act. This part of her book more thoroughly establishes the range of problems that continue to limit public participation rights in Central European countries, such as leftover suspicions of interest-group politics (p. 148), manipulative efforts of governments to prevent disclosure of draft documents (p. 151), and a patchwork of inconsistent practices that have developed in the absence of legal requirements for the dissemination of proposed rules (pp. 151–2). It sketches a realistic picture of the limited effectiveness of civil society groups that struggle with constrained financing, passive participation, and restricted access to the policymaking process.

In her final chapter, Rose-Ackerman urges two reforms for Central European countries: (1) the adoption of procedural rules to ensure public notice about draft rules, solicitation of comments, and statements of reasons, and (2) fostering broader advocacy organizations through government subsidies. Although Rose-Ackerman summarizes some of the earlier studies of U.S. rulemaking and briefly acknowledges recurring problems, she remains perhaps overly optimistic that the publication of proposals and comments can force officials to be responsive to the broader public (pp. 230–2). Agency capture by regulated entities is a major continuing problem in the United States (see, e.g., Reference MerrillMerrill 1997; Reference CrossCross 1999). It would be an even more pervasive problem in Central Europe, where limited consultation with tripartite commissions has been widely accepted. Most current scholarship argues that the cure for agency capture is an even broader requirement for public participation coupled with appropriate judicial review (see, e.g., Reference FontanaFontana 2005). Rose-Ackerman's data on Central Europe suggest, however, that the weakness of civic organizations will present a significant hurdle. It is not clear that increased government funding will be sufficient: the creation of strong civic organizations is likely to require sustained outside funding from international foundations.

Rose-Ackerman's research is thorough, based on a wide range of documentary support as well as extensive 2002–2003 interviews in Hungary and Poland. The particularized research yields practical examples of abstract institutional processes. Although there is more historical detail than necessary, too much discussion of institutions that merely provide performance accountability, and some tedious repetition, the resulting work is a significant contribution to scholarship on Central European institutions.

References

Cross, Frank B. (1999) “The Judiciary and Public Choice,” 50 Hastings Law J. 355.Google Scholar
Fontana, David (2005) “Reforming the Administrative Procedure Act: Democracy Index Rulemaking,” 74 Fordham Law Rev. 81.Google Scholar
Merrill, Thomas (1997) “Agency Capture Theory and the Courts 1967–1983,” 72 Chicago-Kent Law Rev. 1039.Google Scholar