Abstrakt: | Democracy is a timeless, abstract, political system that may occur in virtually any
cultural space. The civilizational context, being external to particular national democracies,
seems of the utmost importance in the process of forming the system in individual states. As
a result, the sphere of shared, similar features of democracy is created. By becoming gradually
accepted and embedded in societies it resembles products of culture and becomes a standard
of modern democracy. As a theoretical tool to describe the external environment of national
democracies, the author proposes the notion of transnational democracy, by which he means
a precisely‑defined
collection of standards and constitutional law patterns, as well as processes
and political actions of state, judicial and social institutions, and also individual behaviours,
that were formed and fixed in a particular cultural space and over a defined period of time.
Additionally, it relates to accepted, or at least tolerated, political ideas present in democratic
countries of a particular cultural circle. The author points to the possible spheres of comparing
national democracies. If such studies are conducted, it will be possible to define common and
perpetuated systemic solutions of contemporary democracy, and subsequently, to gauge the
degree of democracy in a particular state. |