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Democratization By Sam Dembling

Democratization

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Democratization. By Sam Dembling. Democracy and its Variants. Democracy - Government by, of and for the people in which all citizens have a say in which leaders are chosen. Procedural Democracy - Free and fair elections. Minimum. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: Democratization

DemocratizationBy Sam Dembling

Page 2: Democratization

Democracy and its Variants

Democracy- Government by, of and for the people in which all citizens have a say in which leaders are chosen.

Procedural Democracy- Free and fair elections. Minimum.

Substantive Democracy- Procedural + civil liberties and political rights.

Illiberal Democracy- Elections but lack of civil liberties and elections may be unfair.

Managed Democracy- Democracy that leans towards autocracy.

Page 3: Democratization

Democratization Democratization- Transformation from Nondemocratic to

Procedural then *possibly* to Substantive. Three Waves of Democratization-

1st Wave- Late 19th century to late 1920’s. Western Europe.2nd Wave- Post WWII to 1960’s. Colonies in Africa, Asia, and Caribbean.3rd Wave- Late 1970’s to mid 1990’s . First Southern Europe, then Latin America/Asia, then collapse of Soviet Union, then Africa.4th Wave?- Arab Spring once hailed as fourth wave. But, well…

Page 4: Democratization

Preconditions: Modernization

Modernization- Process of moving from a traditional, agriculture based society to a modern, industry or service based society.

Traditional:

Modern:

Page 5: Democratization

Preconditions: Level of Economic

Development Modernization- Often brings democracy.

• Better infrastructure (roads), communication (newspaper, radio, television).

• Mass education needed for citizenry to learn how to use new technology.

•Employment shift from agriculture to industry to services.

•Changing age demographics—longer lives—more concern for the elderly.

•*Better economy= less polarization of resources.*

Page 6: Democratization

Preconditions: History of Democracy

History of Democracy- Predictor of success of democracy: countries w/ long-term experience of it tend to have fuller democracies. Explains why exporting wholesale rarely works.

Deeply entrenched Nomenklatura system has enfeebled democracy in Russia.

Page 7: Democratization

Preconditions: History of Democracy

Senegalese president Macky Sall explains why his country has remained democratic when so many of its neighbors have failed:

1) History of voting under colonial role beginning in 1848. 2) Semi-presidential, only “one chief executive”, precludes

“tensions that can end in coups.” (think South Sudan)

Page 8: Democratization

Preconditions: International

Environment of Democracy

3 Ways Other Countries Influence Political Transitions: 1) Prohibit or Impose Democracy- Ex: Post-WWII,

Russia prohibits democracy; US/Western powers impose it. US in Iraq/Afghanistan.

Page 9: Democratization

International Environment of

Democracy 2) Prestige- How attractive is democracy? Ex: Fascism in

depressed 1930’s, communism in growing 1950’s/60’s Soviet Union, and authoritarianism in disillusioned modern Africa.

Paul Kagame’s successful “benevolent dictatorship” of Rwanda has gained the admiration of other African countries.

Page 10: Democratization

International Environment of

Democracy 3) Incentives- Economic rewards for becoming

democratic. Ex: EU is most obvious example. PIGS (Portugal, Ireland, Greece, Spain—Italy sometimes included) inspired by economic prospects.

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Authoritarian Breakdown: Top-Down

May transition from five broad types of authoritarianism: 1) Top-Down Transition- Democracy is implemented by the govt.

Usually requires long negotiation between opposing forces in govt.

1688- Glorious Revolution part of slow top-down evolution of British democracy.

Page 12: Democratization

Authoritarian Breakdown: Top-Down

Cont. Top-down transitions can be engineered by external powers. US has intervened to create (or sometimes destroy)

democracies: Iraq, Afghanistan.

The current Iraqi parliament.

Page 13: Democratization

Authoritarian Breakdown: Bottom-

Up 2) Bottom-Up Democratization- Enacted by citizenry. Ex:

Soviet Union and its “satellite states” in 1980’s/90’s. Typically triggered by mass demonstration—sometimes violence. Rebels often must be willing to negotiate/compromise.

1991- Yeltsin on a tank! 1980- Polish leader, Lech Walesa, addresses supporters.

Page 14: Democratization

Authoritarian Breakdown: Military

Dictatorships 3) Military Dictatorships- Economic conditions may cause fissure

in powerful military—potential civil war must be averted. Military criminals often pardoned for crimes. Can be plagued by threat of military resurgence—esp. if linked w/ elites.

1999- Olusegun Obasanjo, Nigeria 2013- Egypt: “About our military…”

Page 15: Democratization

Authoritarian Breakdown:

Personalistic Regimes 4) Personalistic Regimes- (Cult of Personality) Based

on a single leader and his/her personality, alliances, or even ethnic group. Rewards those loyal. Often dissolves when leader dies.

Guess who?

Muammar Gadaffi, Libya, 2011.

Page 16: Democratization

Authoritarian Breakdown: Single

Party Rule 5) Single Party Rule- Domination by single party. Can

be democratic in name but authoritarian in nature: Russia. Ex: Mexico’s PRI forced to hold multiparty elections by 1994 recession, devaluation of peso—also democracy sweeping Latin America. Often deeply ingrained.

Page 17: Democratization

Will It Last? Concept of “transition paradigm”

(sequence of democracy) largely rejected. Difficult to prove factors linked w/

democracy. At best, slightly more than tangential.

Factors predicting durability of democracy essentially the same as factors that cause democracy: modernization, external pressure, prestige, incentives. Also history of democracy.

Page 18: Democratization

Sources http://www.mbhs.edu/~swaneyda/files/AP%20Comp.%20Gov./Themes,%20Concepts,%20Vocabulary/Democratizati

on/ap05_comp_govpol_demo_42252.pdf http://www.theguardian.com/world/2012/oct/10/paul-kagame-rwanda-success-authoritarian http://www.democracyweb.org/elections/poland.php http://www.nber.org/digest/jul08/w13915.html http://www.coha.org/democracy-in-mexico-the-past-present-and-future/ http://www.nytimes.com/2000/07/04/opinion/mexico-s-democratic-breakthrough.html http://www.rand.org/content/dam/rand/pubs/monographs/2012/RAND_MG1192.pdf http://www.unc.edu/~kurzman/cv/Kurzman_Waves_of_Democratization.pdf http://www.foreignaffairs.com/discussions/interviews/africas-turn http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-europe-16276956 http://www.aljazeera.com/indepth/opinion/2012/03/2012326133458592301.html http://www.du.edu/korbel/hrhw/researchdigest/reconstruction/iraqdem.pdf http://www.foreignaffairs.com/features/readinglists/what-to-read-on-modernization-theory http://www.cato.org/policy-report/januaryfebruary-2008/can-we-export-democracy http://www.theatlantic.com/international/archive/2013/03/iraqs-new-dysfunctional-democracy/274275/