Winner: Association for Slavic, East European, and Eurasian Studies (ASEEES) 2000 Kulczycki Book Prize in Polish Studies
— ASEEES Kulczycki Book Prize
". . . provides rich information on the political history of Poland during the period after World War II. . . . [A]n important contribution to the literature on emergent democracies in Central and Eastern Europe. . . . rebellious Civil Society gives a broad panorama of political life in Poland, the country that led political and economic reforms in the region, and ought to be of great interest for political scientists and other students of post communist politics."
—Ryszard Szulkin, Stockholm University, Contemporary Sociology
— Ryszard Szulkin, Stockholm University, Contemporary Sociology
"Rebellious Civil Society is both important for its rigorous, theoretically informed and empirically grounded analysis, as for its many additional insights on various aspects of post-communist politics. . . . It stands out among the still primarily shallow and highly normative studies of post-communist Europe, and will hopefully be taken as an example for many studies to come."
—Cas Mudde, E-Extreme, February 2002
— Cas Mudde, E-Extreme
"A rewarding and important book that promises still more when the follow-up comparative studies are completed."
—Foreign Affairs, May/June 2000
— Foreign Affairs
". . . provides a substantial empirical and theoretical supplement to the elite and institutional approaches which have, hitherto, dominated academic debate in post-communist and Polish studies."
—George Sanford, University of Bristol, International Affairs, July 2000
— George Sanford, University of Bristol, International Affairs
". . . has just the right mix of innovation and inspiration. It offers a new set of insights into the major points of seismic shift in post-communist Central Europe. . . . Ekiert and Kubik hack their way through the thickets of theory and data. Central to their discussion is the question: What is the role of popular protest in the consolidation of new democracy? . . . Ekiert and Kubik write out of passion for freedom, democracy, and human agency. Their argument is characteristically detailed and lucid, and is supported by a reading of daa that has powerful political implications. Rebellious Civil Society is a stimulating and well-argued book. . . . Such a combination of compellng scholarship and elegant writing seems almost illicit in a book that ostensibly falls under the rubric of political science."
—2000 AAASS/ORBIS Books Prize for Polish Studies prize citation, NewsNet (AAASS), January 2001
— 2000 AAASS/ORBIS Books Prize for Polish Studies prize citation, NewsNet (AAASS)