POLS 373 Foundations of Comparative Politics

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POLS 373 Foundations of Comparative Politics

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Title: POLS 373 Foundations of Comparative Politics


1
POLS 373 Foundations of Comparative Politics
  • What Makes a Democracy?
  • May 22-24, 2007
  • Professor Timothy Lim
  • California State University, Los Angeles

2
What Makes a Democracy?Introduction
  • First off

3
What Makes a Democracy?Introduction
  • the world is becoming more democratic

This graph shows the number of states with each
of three general authority patterns democracy,
autocracy, and anocracy (an anocracy is defined
as a regime type that has characteristics of both
democratic and authoritarian rule). ______________
______ Source Global Conflict Trends
An autocracy is technically a form of
governmentwhere power is held by one person in
this case,it is used more generally to refer to
non-democraticpolitical system
Democracies
Anocracies
Autocracies
4
What Makes a Democracy?Introduction
  • The world is becoming more democratic

Another perspective In 1910, 0 percent of the
worlds population lived in democracies by 1950,
31 percent of the worlds population is
democratic By 2000, according to one source,
58.2 percent of the worlds people lived in
democracies by 2006, this figure had grown to
63 (based on estimates by Freedom
House) _______________________ Source R.J.
Rummel, Democratic Peace Clock
5
What Makes a Democracy?Introduction
  • Why Is Democracy Spreading?
  • The global spread of democracy raises a number of
    important questions
  • Is the expansion of democracy inevitable? Will
    it necessarily reach all countries in time?
  • Or, is democracy the product of particular
    forces and processes that will be forever
    resisted by some parts of the world, such as the
    Middle East and China?
  • Why did the 20th century witness the most major
    advances of democracy globally? Was there
    something unique about the 20th century?
  • What is the best method of promoting democracy?
    Should the United States be in the business of
    exporting democracies?

6
What Makes a Democracy?Introduction
  • Defining Democracy
  • The definition of democracyis subject to great
    debate, but defining democracy is an essential
    first step, so

What is democracy?
A discussion point
7
What Makes a Democracy?Introduction
  • What is Democracy? A Short Video

This short video from YouTube (click here) poses
the question, What is democracy to a handful of
Americans Note We will watch only a portion of
the video in class.
Video intentionally removed Check CourseSite
8
What Makes a Democracy?Introduction
  • Defining Democracy One Definition
  • I would say democracy exists where you have a
    multiparty system with political parties
    competing with one another, free and non-corrupt
    voting procedures to elect political leaders, and
    an effective legal framework of civil liberties
    or human rights that underlie the mechanisms of
    voting processes
  • Anthony Giddens

9
What Makes a Democracy?Introduction
  • Defining Democracy A Formal Definition
  • Giddens definition includes three core
    characteristics of democracy
  • A competitive multiparty system
  • Free and non-corrupt elections
  • An effective legal framework of civil liberties
    or human rights
  • To this list, we might add a fourth
    characteristic
  • (Near) universal and equal suffrage (suffrage
    is simply the right or privilege of voting)

A discussion point
Are these characteristics enough?
10
What Makes a Democracy?Introduction
  • Defining Democracy A Formal Definition
  • To many people, formal democracy is not
    democracy at all it may be a democracy in name,
    but not in reality
  • Instead, manybelieve thatdemocracy mustbe
    defined insubstantive terms

This cartoon illustrates the problem with formal
democracies people may have the right to vote
in free and non-corrupt elections, but the real
power lies with the corporate elite
11
What Makes a Democracy?Introduction
  • Defining Democracy The Debate
  • How should democracy be defined?
  • Is a formal or narrow definition adequate?
  • Or, is a substantive or broad definition
    necessary?

Points ofdiscussion
12
What Makes a Democracy?Introduction
  • The Case for a Formal Definition
  • Substantive definitions of democracy are
    important, but a formal definition are sometimes
    necessary
  • The appropriateness of a formal definition
    Bare bones definitions are important to
    distinguish between two distinct outcomes or
    phenomena if the distinction can be justified
    and supported, it is appropriate
  • Consider this question

Is a political system that meets the minimal
requirements of a formal democracy significantly
different from an autocracy or dictatorship,
such as the one once ruled over by that
evil-doer Saddam Hussein?
13
What Makes a Democracy?Introduction
  • The Case for a Formal Definition
  • Some Concrete Examples to Consider

Nazi Germany under Adolf Hitler or Germany under
Chancellor Angela Merkel
Chile under Pinochet (1974-1990) or Chile under
President Michelle Bachelet
Japan under Prime Minister Hideki Tojo or Japan
under Juniichiro Koizumi
14
What Makes a Democracy?Introduction
  • The Case for a Formal Definition
  • Key Point If there is a significant difference
    between democracies and autocracies (or
    dictatorships or fascist regimes), then a formal
    definition of democracy is both appropriate and
    meaningful even more, a formal democracy matters
  • it matters because it signifies (in contrast
    to autocratic rule) a real and significant change
    in society The establishment of formal
    democracy invariably supports (although does not
    guarantee) progress towards greater substantive
    social, political, and economic equality

Is a political system that meets the minimal
requirements of a formal democracy significantly
different from an autocracy or dictatorship,
such as the one once ruled over by that
evil-doer Saddam Hussein?
15
What Makes a Democracy?Introduction
  • The Case for a Formal Definition
  • Analytically speaking, it is also critical that
    concepts such as democracy be operationalized
  • Quick definition Operationalization is the
    process of defining a concept so that it can be
    ______________ through specific observations.
  • Operationalization is important in the sciences,
    for if it is not possible to measure (or
    quantify) a phenomenon, it is difficult if not
    impossible to evaluate its causes or
    consequences
  • For example, how can we know that someone is
    intelligent if we cannot measure
    intelligence?How can we study intelligence if
    we cannotadequately distinguish it from other
    aspectsof human consciousness?

measured
16
What Makes a Democracy?Introduction
  • The Case for a Formal Definition
  • One last point
  • Using a formal definition of democracy does not
    mean that we should ignore substantive
    definitions
  • Indeed, depending on the purpose of the
    research, a substantive definition is sometimes
    preferred, if not absolutely essential
  • Example. A study of why some democracies are
    strong while others are weak or a study of how
    to improve democracy
  • both require a substantive definition

17
  • Explanations of Democracy

18
What Makes a Democracy? Competing Explanations
  • Some Questions
  • There is a tendency--in the West at least--to
    assume that democracy benefits everyone. But this
    isnt necessarily true. To begin a study of
    democracy, then, it is crucial to begin with some
    basic questions
  • In general, who (or which groups) in society
    opposes democracy?
  • In general, who (or which groups) in society
    favor democracy?
  • Who benefits from democracy and whose interests
    are threatened?

19
What Makes a Democracy? Competing Explanations
  • Who Opposes Democracy?
  • For the dominant groups in society, democracy
    generally represents a concrete threat to their
    own interests, since, by its very nature,
    democracy gives power to the oppressed or
    subordinate classes who constitute the large
    majority of any societys population

Historically, the group most resistant to
democracy has been the landowning class this is
because landowners, more than any other dominant
class, depend on a subservient, oppressed labor
class
20
What Makes a Democracy? Competing Explanations
  • Who Opposes Democracy?
  • Think of it this way If the majority of people
    in a society are poor and exploited would they
    not be immediately tempted, in a democratic
    system, to use their new-found and overwhelming
    voting power to redistribute economic resources
    and, ultimately, to undermine permanentlyif
    not destroythe position and privileges of the
    wealthy (or political and economic elite)?

21
What Makes a Democracy? Competing Explanations
  • Who Opposes Democracy?
  • In the 20th century, opponents of democracy have
    also included states and/or state leaders,
    especially in poor or developing countries

The 1989 Chinese democracy movement in
Tiananmen Square represents an example of
state-opposition to democracy ___________________
___________ Leaders of modern states often oppose
democracy because their own survival may be at
stake once they are out of office other state
leaders believe that democracy will result in too
many demands by labor, thus undermining the
industrialization process
Video intentionally removed  Check CourseSite
22
What Makes a Democracy? Competing Explanations
  • Who Favors Democracy?
  • Simple Answer Any group or segment of society
    that would benefit from having a greater voice in
    the political process

Historically, this has included the middle
class, the working class, the masses in general,
the petty bourgeoisie (e.g., small merchants,
craftsmen, and other self-employed groups), and
the intellectual class (especially university
students)
23
  • Democracy and Power
  • Given the almost undeniable tension between
    democracy and social inequality, most analysts
    agree

Democracy is above all a matter of power
24
What Makes a Democracy? Competing Explanations
  • Democracy and Power Implications
  • Democracy does not just happen through some
    automatic process, but is a product of a
    political struggle among competing groups with
    competing interests
  • Democratization requires some underlying shift in
    power (among or between different groups)
  • The transition to democracy marks a significant
    political change, but transitions to democracy
    are never guaranteed indeed, given the nature of
    democratic change, opposition and attempts to
    re-impose a non-democratic system should be
    expected

25
What Makes a Democracy? Competing Explanations
  • Democracy and Power Implications
  • Structuralists, rationalists, and culturalists
    generally agree on the significance of power, but
    they differ on several key questions
  • Who are the key agents of change? Are they
    elites, subordinate actors, outside agents or
    some combination?
  • How does the struggle for power unfold? Is it the
    product of elite interaction? Is it a structural
    phenomenon, a cultural one, or something else?
  • Do certain conditions need to exist before
    democratization can happen? Or is democracy
    possible under any circumstances?

26
What Makes a Democracy? Competing Explanations
  • Democracy and Power Structural View
  • To structuralists, transitions to democracy are
    shaped and even determined by broad structural
    changes that reorder the balance of power among
    different classes and class coalitions in society
  • For democracy to emerge, subordinate classes must
    have sufficient power to challenge the dominant
    classes, but

How do subordinate classes get power?
Discussionquestion
27
What Makes a Democracy? Competing Explanations
  • Democracy and Power Structural View
  • How do subordinate classes get power?
  • Basic Answer The power of subordinate classes
    is a product of capitalist development, which
    brings unavoidable changes to any society.
    Specifically
  • Capitalism creates subordinate classes with the
    capacity for _________________________.
  • Capitalism also entails greater dependence of
    elite groups on subordinate classes simply put,
    capitalists rely on workers to work
  • Capitalism creates tensions between elite groups
    landowners, in particular, lose power at the
    expense of industrialists, which weakens the
    cohesion of the elite

self-organization
SELF-ORGANIZATION An Explanation Capitalism
brings the subordinate class or classes together
in factories cities wheremembers of those
classes can associate and organized more easily
it improves the means of communication and
transportation in these and other ways, it
strengthenscivil society and facilitates
subordinateclass organization
28
What Makes a Democracy? Competing Explanations
  • The importance of self-organization is
    underscored in Marx and Engels famous quote
    (from the Communist Manifesto)

Workers of the world unite! You have nothing to
lose but your chains
29
What Makes a Democracy? Competing Explanations
  • Democracy and Power Structural View
  • Having more power doesnt automatically lead to
    democracy for subordinate groups
  • Sometimes subordinate groups are co-opted by the
    elite
  • Sometimes subordinate groups, while more
    powerful, still lack enough power to topple the
    existing regime--in these cases, alliances with
    other groups may be necessary
  • In a similar vein, sometimes the state is
    overdeveloped (i.e., possesses excessive
    coercive capacity, often as a result of an
    alliance with major Western countries)
  • Sometimes transnational forces intervene, e.g.,
    during the Cold War, the US helped or abetted to
    overthrow democratically elected governments in
    Iran, Iraq, Chile, Guatemala, Dominican Republic,
    Indonesia, Greece, etc. more recently, some
    argue that the US attempted to overthrow Hugo
    Chavez in Venezuela

Co-option refers to the process of being
incorporatedinto the mainstream or dominant
power structure, butalways in a subservient
role. Frequently, thosewho have been co-opted
will embrace the interestsof the dominant power
structure while neglectingthe interests of their
original group
30
What Makes a Democracy? Competing Explanations
  • Democracy and Power Structural View
  • In general, however, structuralists assert that
    capitalist development is the underlying process
    through which democracy emerges
  • This helps explain why democracy is a primarily
    20th century phenomenon capitalist
    industrialization has made its greatest and most
    rapid strides in the 100 years or so
  • In the postwar period, consider the cases of
    South Korea and Taiwan
  • At the same time, (to structuralists) democracy
    is an essentially unintended outcome of
    capitalism that is, capitalism is not designed
    to promote democracy (or freedom) indeed, it may
    be antithetical to capitalism

31
What Makes a Democracy? Competing Explanations
  • Democracy and Power Structural View
  • Questions for consideration and discussion
  • As a rapid growing capitalist society, is the
    breakdown of authoritarian, communist party rule
    in China inevitable?
  • Can structuralists account for the longevity of
    authoritarianism in the Middle East, especially
    among Arab Islamic countries?
  • Are there any inconsistencies in the structural
    account that you can identify? How would a
    rationalist or a culturalist respond? Why, for
    example, does the quality or substance of
    democracy seem to be weakening today, even in
    well-established democracies, such as the United
    States?

Hint Consider how globalizationis weakening
subordinate classes,especially the working class
32
  • An Alternative Perspective
  • Rationalists do not agree that inert, invisible
    structures make democracies. To put it very
    simply, believe that

people make democracy
People may be political elites or the people,
as in mass movements
33
What Makes a Democracy? Competing Explanations
  • Different Processes, Different Actors
    Rationality
  • Some Basic Differences and Assumptions
  • Rationalists dont consider capitalism to be the
    key process in democratization
  • Rationalists dont necessarily discount the role
    of subordinate classes, but they tend to put
    greater emphasis on the interests and actions of
    the elite (more on this shortly)
  • Rationalists dont like to focus on underlying
    (economic) structures they believe that
    democracy is possible in virtually any economic
    context

34
What Makes a Democracy? Competing Explanations
  • Different Processes, Different Actors
    Rationality
  • Some Basic Differences and Assumptions among
    Rationalists
  • Rationalists dont agree on which people matter
    most
  • Some rationalists argue that only the elite
    matter, that they are the key agents in
    democracy
  • Others argue that the people (and not just the
    working class) are the key agents of political
    change

35
What Makes a Democracy? Competing Explanations
  • Different Processes, Different Actors
    Rationality
  • Some Basic Differences and Assumptions among
    Rationalists
  • Rationalists dont agree on the basic process of
    democratization
  • Some rationalists argue that democratization is
    a product of negotiations among the elite, also
    known as ____________ in this view democracy is
    a cooperative and very deliberate project
  • Other rationalists argue that democratization is
    a non-cooperative project, that is, it is a
    product of coercion, whereby authoritarian
    leaders are, in essence, forced to leave office
    under threat of violence

pacting
36
What Makes a Democracy? Competing Explanations
  • Different Processes, Different Actors
    Rationality
  • Implications of Cooperative and Non-Cooperative
    Explanations
  • Cooperative Explanations Epitomized by Samuel
    Huntingtons observation on an ironic feature of
    contemporary democratization
  • Non-Cooperative Explanations Suggests that
    democracy is product of people who want it and
    are willing to risk their lives to get it from
    a rational choice perspective, the push for
    democracy changes the strategic environment for
    political leaders when mass-movements are strong
    enough, leaders can see the writing on the wall,
    they know they have no choice but to leave

Democracy without democrats
What does this statement mean? From a
rationalist perspective, how does this statement
make sense?
37
What Makes a Democracy? Competing Explanations
  • Different Processes, Different Actors
    Rationality
  • Empirical Issues
  • Both cooperative (elite-centered) and
    non-cooperative approaches (mass-based) have
    empirical support
  • Latin American cases
  • Supports Elite-Centered Mass-Based approach?
  • Post-Communist cases (Eastern Europe)
  • Supports Elite-Centered Mass-Based approach?

38
What Makes a Democracy? Competing Explanations
  • Different Processes, Different Actors
    Rationality
  • So where does this leave us?
  • Can the rational choice approach provide a
    theoretically coherent and empirically
    comprehensive explanation of democratic
    transition?

The answer is a definite
maybe
39
What Makes a Democracy? Competing Explanations
  • Differing Authoritarianisms An Alternative
    Rational Choice Perspective
  • A little comparative checking will tell us that
    not all authoritarian regimes are alike
  • Some are dominated by military leaders, who may
    have taken power through a coup d'état
  • Some are dominated by personalist or
    charismatic leaders single individuals who
    dominate the political process
  • Some are dominated by a highly cohesive, tightly
    disciplined party structure--so-called single
    party regimes

40
What Makes a Democracy? Competing Explanations
  • Differing Authoritarianisms An Alternative
    Rational Choice Perspective
  • For a long time, many scholars took these
    differences for granted they did not assign any
    particular causal significance to the different
    varieties of authoritarianism
  • One scholar, however, asked the question

Can different types of authoritarianism lead to
different outcomes?
In other words, is authoritarian type an
independent variable?
41
What Makes a Democracy? Competing Explanations
  • The Rationality of Authoritarianism
  • Begins with the premise that different types of
    authoritarian leaders have different preferences
    or interests
  • Military leaders are less concerned with
    political power and more concerned with the
    survival and efficacy of the __________________
    itself and with the preservation of
    ________________________.
  • Personalist leaders have an overriding interest
    in staying in power the perks of political
    power are many, while the costs of losing power
    are extremely high and almost certain (e.g.,
    imprisonment, death, or, at best, exile)
  • Single-party leaders also have an overriding
    interest in holding on to political power, but,
    unlike personalist regimes, their power base is
    more stable and enduring than in personalist
    regimes

military
national security
42
What Makes a Democracy? Competing Explanations
  • The Rationality of Authoritarianism
  • Basic Argument Different types of regimes arise
    for different reasons, but, once created, they
    tend to exhibit similar characteristics
    regardless of political, social or cultural
    context
  • ______________ regimes are the most likely to
    breakdown because the leaders are not interested
    in political power per se
  • Moreover, if any internal splits threaten the
    cohesion and power of the military, their
    preference is to save the military rather than
    to hold on to political power
  • Key Implication Military authoritarian regimes
    not only tend to have the shortest life spans,
    but the transition to democracy is generally
    negotiated and cooperative

Military
43
What Makes a Democracy? Competing Explanations
  • The Rationality of Authoritarianism
  • Basic Argument Different types of regimes arise
    for different reasons, but, once created, they
    tend to exhibit similar characteristics
    regardless of political, social or cultural
    context
  • __________________ and ________________ regimes
    are more resistant to breakdown because the
    political leaders have more to lose leaders will
    fight tooth-and-nail to hold on to power
  • This means that transitions are almost always
    _____________________
  • In addition, the impetus for a transition to
    democracy, especially in single-party regimes,
    will generally come from the outside, that is,
    __________________ shocks are usually needed to
    spark a change

Personalist
Single party
non-cooperative
exogenous
44
What Makes a Democracy? Competing Explanations
  • NOTE
  • The cultural perspective on democracy will not
    be covered in our lecture Please review pp.
    188-195
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