The constitutional and legal status of the Hellenic Armed Forces and their interaction with the Hellenic Society

Approved for public release; distribution is unlimited === Hellas was officially declared an independent State in 1828, after a seven-year struggle against the conquerors. Despite the young age, however, she demonstrated a rich, and often turbulent, political life. The followed pattern was not uniqu...

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Main Authors: Antonopoulos, Theodoros C., Yiazitzis, John T.
Other Authors: Levy, Cynthia
Language:en_US
Published: Monterey, California. Naval Postgraduate School 2012
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10945/8145
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spelling ndltd-nps.edu-oai-calhoun.nps.edu-10945-81452015-06-11T03:59:19Z The constitutional and legal status of the Hellenic Armed Forces and their interaction with the Hellenic Society Antonopoulos, Theodoros C. Yiazitzis, John T. Levy, Cynthia Teti, Frank Approved for public release; distribution is unlimited Hellas was officially declared an independent State in 1828, after a seven-year struggle against the conquerors. Despite the young age, however, she demonstrated a rich, and often turbulent, political life. The followed pattern was not unique by itself: it reflected the parliamentary transformations that swept all over Europe during the last three hundred years. Its uniqueness lies on the rapidity with which these transformations took place, until the finalization of stable republican governance in 1974. What makes this Thesis interesting for the foreign reader is the degree of influence exerted by the armed forces over the political developments. Covertly in the beginning, but with ever increasing determination as the years passed, the armed forces assumed leading role and even dominated the political scene. Inadequately institutionalized civilian control over the army and political immaturity combined to form this behavioral pattern. By the beginning of the last quarter of the century, however, it was realized that Hellas could not claim a reputable position among the community of civilized nations unless by abolishing antiquated institutions. The 1975 Constitution, and the way civilian authorities consolidated control over the armed forces, are textbook examples of a successful transition to a fully developed democratic regime 2012-08-09T19:19:02Z 2012-08-09T19:19:02Z 1997-12 Thesis http://hdl.handle.net/10945/8145 en_US Monterey, California. Naval Postgraduate School
collection NDLTD
language en_US
sources NDLTD
description Approved for public release; distribution is unlimited === Hellas was officially declared an independent State in 1828, after a seven-year struggle against the conquerors. Despite the young age, however, she demonstrated a rich, and often turbulent, political life. The followed pattern was not unique by itself: it reflected the parliamentary transformations that swept all over Europe during the last three hundred years. Its uniqueness lies on the rapidity with which these transformations took place, until the finalization of stable republican governance in 1974. What makes this Thesis interesting for the foreign reader is the degree of influence exerted by the armed forces over the political developments. Covertly in the beginning, but with ever increasing determination as the years passed, the armed forces assumed leading role and even dominated the political scene. Inadequately institutionalized civilian control over the army and political immaturity combined to form this behavioral pattern. By the beginning of the last quarter of the century, however, it was realized that Hellas could not claim a reputable position among the community of civilized nations unless by abolishing antiquated institutions. The 1975 Constitution, and the way civilian authorities consolidated control over the armed forces, are textbook examples of a successful transition to a fully developed democratic regime
author2 Levy, Cynthia
author_facet Levy, Cynthia
Antonopoulos, Theodoros C.
Yiazitzis, John T.
author Antonopoulos, Theodoros C.
Yiazitzis, John T.
spellingShingle Antonopoulos, Theodoros C.
Yiazitzis, John T.
The constitutional and legal status of the Hellenic Armed Forces and their interaction with the Hellenic Society
author_sort Antonopoulos, Theodoros C.
title The constitutional and legal status of the Hellenic Armed Forces and their interaction with the Hellenic Society
title_short The constitutional and legal status of the Hellenic Armed Forces and their interaction with the Hellenic Society
title_full The constitutional and legal status of the Hellenic Armed Forces and their interaction with the Hellenic Society
title_fullStr The constitutional and legal status of the Hellenic Armed Forces and their interaction with the Hellenic Society
title_full_unstemmed The constitutional and legal status of the Hellenic Armed Forces and their interaction with the Hellenic Society
title_sort constitutional and legal status of the hellenic armed forces and their interaction with the hellenic society
publisher Monterey, California. Naval Postgraduate School
publishDate 2012
url http://hdl.handle.net/10945/8145
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