Democratisation of Defence Policies and Systems in Slovenia and Montenegro: Developmental and Comparative Aspects

Author:

Prezelj Iztok1,Injac Olivera2,Kolak Anja3

Affiliation:

1. Professor and Vice-Dean for Research at the Faculty of Social Sciences , University of Ljubljana , Kardeljeva ploscad 5, 1000 Ljubljana

2. Associate Professor, Department for Security Studies , University of Donja Gorica , Oktoih 1, 81000 Podgorica

3. Researcher at the Faculty of Social Sciences , University of Ljubljana , Kardeljeva ploscad 5, 1000 Ljubljana

Abstract

Abstract The democratisation of national defence policies and systems plays a vital role in making any country more democratic. The democratic transition of this sector in Slovenia and Montenegro has experienced a challenging reform process and it is now time for reflection. This paper aims to identify the main characteristics and issues of the democratisation process in the field of national defence in both countries and, by comparing them, to look for key similarities and differences. The paper argues and confirms that the Slovenian and Montenegrin national defence and security systems were initially faced with serious post-socialist democratic deficits, but gradual democratisation then brought drastic improvements to the quality of their democracy. The process of joining NATO and the change from a military threat perception to a non-military threat perception created space for many reforms. Greatest steps forward in democratisation in both countries entailed nominating civilian defence ministers, having a reasonable number of civilian defence experts involved in the military business, establishing working parliamentary monitoring committees, reducing defence budgets and reallocating funding to other sectors. Progress was also observed in reducing the total number of soldiers, establishing a fully professional armed force, assuring that women in the armed forces were properly represented and increasing the deployment of soldiers to foreign stabilisation operations in a sign of becoming security providers.

Publisher

Walter de Gruyter GmbH

Subject

Political Science and International Relations,Sociology and Political Science

Reference95 articles.

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2. Arostegui, Julie L. (2015): Gender and the Security Sector: Towards a More Secure Future. Connections: The Quarterly Journal 14 (3): 7–30.10.11610/Connections.14.3.02

3. Atkins, Susan (2018): Women in the Armed Forces in the OSCE Region, OSCE, Office for Democratic Institutions and Human Rights, Baseline Study Report.

4. Ball, Nicole (2010): The Evolution of the Security Sector Reform Agenda, in Sedra, Mark, ed., The Future of Security Sector Reform, 29–44, The Centre for International Governance Innovation (CIGI).

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