Title: Goal
1AP Comp Day 10 How and WHAT will we compare?
- Goal to understand democracy is a concept with
many meanings and complex factors that both
advance and inhibit its effective operation. - Questions from homework?
- Important terms related to Democracy and
legitimacy - Democracy according to Kesselman
- Discuss with group answer to homework question
Add to your answer - Identify the 5 democratic conditions necessary
for a political system to be typed as democratic - Current Events discussion
- Democracy according to Powell AR 13
- Identify and explain the broad principles of
democracy - Identify the 5 conditions for a system to earn a
democratic classification - Identify the preconditions for democratic
consolidation - Do you agree that these are the main principles
and conditions? What should be added or removed
to make our understanding of democracy more
complete and accurate? - How does the Briefing paper compare to Kesselman?
- Identify and explain the broad process of
democratization - Identify the types of democracy.
- Identify the preconditions for a system to earn a
democratic classification - Identify the factors for democratic consolidation
2Emergency Lifted in BangkokThai Government Cites
Effect on TourismBy Jocelyn Gecker AP Monday,
September 15, 2008 A15BANGKOK, Sept. 15 -- The
Thai government on Sunday ended a state of
emergency imposed in the capital to control a
violent political crisis, saying it had served
only to scare away tourists crucial to the
country's economy. Acting Prime Minister Somchai
Wongsawat urged all sides in the deepening
political standoff to compromise and help restore
the country's image. The spirit of compromise
will be tested this week as the parliament seeks
-- for a second time -- to elect a prime minister
acceptable to all sides. Samak Sundaravej, who
took over as prime minister after elections in
December, was forced to resign Sept. 9 when the
Constitutional Court ruled that he had violated
conflict-of-interest laws by accepting money to
host TV cooking shows while in office. The ruling
was an unrelated twist to the political
crisis. Protesters accused Samak of being a
stooge of former prime minister Thaksin, who
recently fled to Britain to escape corruption
charges. Thaksin was ousted in a 2006 military
coup after street demonstrations by the same
group
3Articulation
- Articulation interest groups types are based
on - their goals and organization
- institutional groups groups whose main purpose
is something other than interest articulation
like a bureaucracy in government, the Church, the
bridge club, etc. but nonetheless operates at
times to advance in the political system the
interests of its members - Associational groups a formal, well-organized,
hierarchical (generally) organization whose
primary purpose is articulation of its members
interests - Non-associational groups like associational in
purpose, but not well-organized and without
formality or membership - Anomic groups - spontaneous, unorganized groups
who form generally from emotional stimuli like
frustration or relative deprivation. Behaviors
and methods of interest articulation are often
violent - Their number, efficacy and connection to the
state - Corporatist entire sectors of interest are
represented by a single organization (body)
speaking with a single voice - Pluralist each interest sector is represented
by numerous groups each with its own voice
4Aggregation
- Aggregation political leadership, elites and
parties are dependent upon the structure of the
state - Authoritarian single-party exclusive and
inclusive - Authoritarian multi-party
- competitive 2 party Single-member district
first-past-the-post electoral system - Pluralist party systems parliamentary
proportional electoral system
5Rule of Law
- The concept that the power and discretion of
government and its officials ought to be
restrained by a supreme set of neutral rules that
prevent arbitrary and unfair action by
government. Also called constitutionalism. -
Magstadt
- the principle that legal rules rather than
arbitrary or personal decisions determine what
happens Hauss
- governments can take no action that has not
been authorized by law and that citizens can be
punished only for actions violating existing
laws- A P
6Legitimacy
- A significant segment of the citizenry must
believe that the state acts with some moral
authority. People believe that the state has the
right to issue rules binding for people within
their borders - Kesselman
- People believe that rules should be followed
voluntarily because they are in the best
interests of all citizens. Palmer
- People have the feeling that the regimes rule
is rightful and should be obeyed.- Roskin
Some key legitimizing factors Transparency,
free elections, compatibility of system with
culture, open and free press, economic success,
improved living standards, rule of law, access to
quality public services, civil rights,
responsiveness to inputs, civil society,
accountability, political efficacy, absence of
relative deprivation
7Civic Culture
- Culture characterized by by trust, legitimacy,
and limited involvement, which some theorists
believe is most conducive to democracy - Hauss
- A political culture characterized by 1)most
citizens acceptance of the authority of the
state but also 2) a general belief in civic
duties participation is mixed with passivity,
trust and a deference to authority Wynn
8Civil Society
- The web of membership in social and political
groups that some analysts believe is needed to
sustain democracy - Hauss
- an extensive network of interest groups and
public participation social and political
interactions free of state control or regulation,
such as community groups, voluntary assocs and
even religious groups AP
- space occupied by voluntary assocs outside the
state like professional assocs, trade unions,
student and womens groupssimilar to society
although civil society implies a degree of
organization absent from the more inclusive term
society - Kesselman
9Kesselmans Democracy required principles
1 political accountability state must be able
to be held accountable by the governed 2
political competition alternation of power must
be possible for different political parties and
the losers must accept the winners right to
govern 3 political freedom citizens must have
the rights to participate and be informed must
have rule of law and independent judiciary 4
political equality all citizens must be able to
participate in politics with their votes and
voices weighted equally
10Kesselmans Democracy conditions to earn label
of democracy
- Free and fair competitive elections with rules
and regularity - Freedom of assembly and party activity
- Procedures w/o arbitrariness, due process,
transparency in policy-making and accountability - Civil liberties and rights w/ political equality
- Independent judiciary with power over other
institutions of govt
11Kesselman - Qualification of the Democracy
definition
- Democracy can be inequitable
- No country is completely democratic
- Contentiousness of issues often result valid and
legitimate positions that result in a winner and
loser, where the loser believes that the decision
may be illegitimate - Economic inequalities stack the deck against the
poor in the arena of politics - Many different institutional types of
democracies, not just presidential
12Kesselman - Preconditions for consolidation
- For a system to be typed as having transitioned
from authoritarianism through the transitional
democracy types to being a consolidated
democracy, the system must have - met the five conditions of democracy
- Free fair elections
- Freedom of political assembly
- Regime has accountability based on fixed,
knowable, transparent procedures - Civil and political rights
- Independent judiciary
- Been in existence for some kind of length of time
- Democratic practices that have become deeply
ingrained and the five conditions have been met
relatively consistently -
13Democratization Briefing Paper
- Democratization is the process by which a
nation-state moves from non-democracy through
procedural to fully consolidated substantive
democracy. - This has happened in three waves
- 19th and early 20th C US, UK, France (sorta),
Canada, et al - After WWII as empires crumbled and fascism failed
- 70s through 90s as communism and the USSR
failed and the authoritarians throughout saw
their fragile economies and corrupt leadership
styles become illegitimated
14Democratization Briefing Paper
- Substantive Democracy like Kesselmans enduring
or consolidated democracy - Procedural democracy has the basics like a
newly transitional democracy, but not
consolidated yet - Illiberal democracy has the appearance of
democracy, like a Potemkin Village, but the
underlying factors do not exist to much extent - Electoral authoritarianism non-democracies who
pretend to be democratic
15Democratization Briefing Paper
- Preconditions of Democratization
- Level of economic development while not
necessary, it is often an important catalyst in
producing modernization an environment of
education, widespread information media, improved
infrastructure for information and
transportation, leading to civil society and
better living standards. All of this helps to
lead to democratization. - International and regional environment of
democracy if the world, trading partners and
neighbors want democracy, it puts pressure on
system to democratize
16Democratization Briefing Paper
- Substantive democracy consolidation includes
- Democratic competition accepted by all major
actors seeking political influence - Citizen participation
- Rule of law
- Society has accepted the values of competitive
parties, independent judiciaries, subordinated
militaries, and the rule of law - Continued modernization and improved standards of
living
17S and K - Procedures Democracy in a nation-state
- Elected officials make policy within
constitutional limits w/o veto from informal or
unelected sources or from super-sovereign
influences from abroad - competitive, fair, free, non-coercive regular
elections - practically full universal suffrage
- Practically universal right to run for office
- Free and noncoercive right to expression
- Free, widely available multiple information
sources - Civil society
18S and Ks factors of feasibility for Democracy in
a nation-state are
- Agreement that electoral winners get to rule, but
winners cannot freeze out opposition - Citizens must follow rules, currently agreed to
or not, so long as there is legitimacy based
partially on belief that free elections will
occur later contingent consent - There does not have to be consensus, just rule of
law consistent with the political culture or set
of political norms - Must be opportunity for alternation of power and
policy