fbpx
  • Phone : +995 599 990 212
  • Email : [email protected]
  • en
  • Facebook
  • YouTube
  • Twitter
  • Home
  • About us
    • Our team
    • Projects
    • Annual Reports
      • Annual Report 2018
      • Annual Report 2017
    • Join us
      • Job Vacancies
      • Internship
  • Publications
    • Policy Briefs & Papers
    • Books & Compendiums
    • Policy Memo
    • EXPERT INTERVIEW
    • Expert Comment
    • Research Papers
    • Reports
  • BLOG
  • GIP Conference
    • #GEODEM2019
    • #GEODEM2018
    • #GEODEM2017
    • #GEODEM2016
  • Expert Polls
    • About
    • Polls
    • Report
    • Blogs & Commentaries
    • Infographics
    • Media
  • Media
    • News
    • Events
    • GIP in the news
  • October 29
  • Posted By: GIP
  • Posted In: Policy Memo
  • Tags: elections challenges, Georgian elections, Georgian politics, GIP analysis, GIP team, GIPfordemocracy, opposition consolidation, Policy memo, political polarization, small parties, Teona Zurabashvili, Vicious Circle
  • 29/10/2021
    • 0
    • 999

Political Polarization – a Vicious Circle or a Missed Opportunity for Small Political Parties?

  • Share This Artcle :
Previous Post

Georgia’s Political Landscape: Diversity, Convergence and Empty Spots

Next Post

Georgia’s Security Options, as a Small State Navigating the Pressures of an Evolving International System – Expert Interview with Professor Roy Allison

Author

Related Posts

  • December 08

Revamping the Nakhijevan-Yerevan-Baku Railway: Significance, Opportunities and Obstacles

  • November 25

From Delegating the Coercion to Non-State Actors to the Idea of “Sovereign Democracy”

  • October 29

Political Polarization – a Vicious Circle or a Missed Opportunity for Small Political Parties?

Related Posts

From Delegating the Coercion to Non-State Actors to the Idea of “Sovereign Democracy”

Party Identity as the Basis for Splinter Party Electoral Success

Op-Ed: Understanding Georgia’s current political situation

Georgia’s Political Landscape: Diversity, Convergence and Empty Spots

MEP Andrius Kubilius on the integration of Eastern Partnership Countries into the EU

The Georgian Institute of Politics

A Tbilisi-based non-profit, non-partisan, research and analysis organization founded in early 2011. GIP strives to strengthen the organizational backbone of democratic institutions and promote good governance and development through policy research and advocacy in Georgia. It also encourages public participation in civil society-building and developing democratic processes.

© 2020

Subscribe

Contact us

  • Email
    [email protected]
  • Phone
    +995 599 990 212
  • Address
    13 Aleksandr Pushkin St,
    0107 Tbilisi, Georgia