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Journal of Contemporary History, Vol. 43, No. 2, 305-332 (2008)
DOI: 10.1177/0022009408089034

Political Purges and State Crisis in Portugal's Transition to Democracy, 1975—76

António Costa Pinto

Institute of Social Sciences, University of Lisbon

The Portuguese military coup of 25 April 1974 was the beginning of the 'third wave' of democratic transitions in Southern Europe. Unshackled by international pro-democratizing forces and occurring in the midst of the Cold War, the coup led to a severe crisis of the state that was aggravated by the simultaneous processes of transition to democracy and de-colonization of what was the last European colonial empire. This article analyses how Portugal's political �lite and society struggled with two aspects of the authoritarian legacies of the 'Estado Novo' during the transition: the élite and the institutions associated with the dictatorship. The nature of the Portuguese transition and the consequent state crises created a 'window of opportunity' in which the 'reaction to the past' was much stronger in Portugal than in the other Southern European transitions. In fact, the transition's powerful dynamic in itself served to constitute a legacy for the consolidation of democracy.

Key Words: authoritarianism • democratization • legacies • political purges • Portugal • transitional justice


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