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Democracies and Authoritarian Regimes Oct 20 Lecture Overview Third Wave of Democratization Defining Democracy Achieving Democracy The Sequence of Democratic Development? – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Democracies%20and%20Authoritarian%20Regimes


1
Democracies and Authoritarian Regimes
  • Oct 20

2
Lecture Overview
  • Third Wave of Democratization
  • Defining Democracy
  • Achieving Democracy
  • The Sequence of Democratic Development?
  • Contemporary Democracy
  • Forms of Authoritarian Rule

3
Third Wave of Democratization
4
Freedom House
  • Freedom House is a non-government organization
    that receives the majority of its funding from
    the US government.
  • This raises questions its independence, and the
    extent to which it is influenced by American
    foreign policy.
  • Critics argue that it is, in fact, an arm of the
    American foreign policy regime.
  • It publishes Freedom in the World an annual
    assessment of political and civil rights of
    countries around the world.
  • http//www.freedomhouse.org

5
Defining Democracy
6
What is democracy?

7
What is democracy?
  • Procedural questions
  • Substantive questions

8
Democracy defined
  • Adam Przeworski Democracy is a system in which
    parties lose elections

9
Democracy defined
  • Joseph Schumpeter the democratic method is that
    institutional arrangement for arriving at
    political decisions in which individuals acquire
    the power to decide by means of a competitive
    struggle for the peoples vote

10
Democracy defined
  • Seymour Martin Lipset First, competition exists
    for government positions, and fair elections for
    public office occur at regular intervals without
    the use of force and without excluding any social
    group. Second, citizens participate in selecting
    their leaders and forming policies. And, third,
    civil and political liberties exist to ensure the
    integrity of political competition and
    participation

11
Potential forms of democracy Other spheres of
democracy?
  • direct democracy?
  • participatory democracy?
  • social democracy?
  • industrial democracy?
  • workplace democracy?
  • economic democracy?

12
Achieving Democracy
13
Göran Therborn, 1977. The Rule of Capital and
the Rise of Democracy. New Left Review.
May/June. No. 103. (journal available online via
library catalogue)
14
(No Transcript)
15
Therborn (1977)
16
  • Chapter 5 Democracies
  • Developing democracy (1/5)
  • According to Dahl (1966) there were three
    milestones in the development
  • of democracies
  • Incorporation
  • Representation
  • Organized opposition

17
  • Chapter 5 Democracies
  • Developing democracy (2/5)
  • (1) Incorporation
  • Before the first wave of democratization
    several restrictions to the right of vote
    existed Census voting (wealth), capacity voting
    (education), race, gender, age.
  • Gradual extension of voting-rights during the
    first wave in the 19th century
  • 1848 Universal male suffrage introduced in
    Germany, France and Switzerland
  • 1893 Universal female suffrage introduced in New
    Zealand
  • Since then no further extension, except the
    lowering of the age threshold. Still widespread
    voting restrictions to foreign residents .

18
  • Chapter 5 Democracies
  • Developing democracy (3/5)
  • (2) Representation
  • The right to organize parties and to have them
    represented in parliament.
  • One indicator Shift from majoritarian voting to
    proportional voting (first time introduced in
    Finland 1907).
  • Fear of established parties from
    mass-mobilization by the new parties.

19
  • Chapter 5 Democracies
  • Developing democracy (4/5)
  • (3) Organized opposition
  • The right of the opposition to vote against the
    government.
  • One indicator First acceptance of socialist
    parties into government (first time in Australia
    in 1904).
  • The capacity of parliaments to effect full
    executive turnover varies significantly between
    liberal democracies.
  • The net shift of votes from government to
    opposition (incumbency volatility) doubled from
    the 1960s to the 1990s.

20
  • Chapter 5 Democracies
  • Developing democracy (5/5)
  • (3) Organized Opposition (continued)
  • The older and more established democracies
    reached these milestones one by one, and over a
    long period of time.
  • The newer democracies have reached these
    milestones more or less simultaneously.

21
The Sequence of Democratic Development
22
Sequencing Political Development
  • First, there should be a national identity
    producing national unity
  • Second, there follows the establishment and
    institutionalization over time of state
    structures which are legitimate and effective
  • Third, various elite groups then engage in
    competition with each other, usually by forming
    rudimentary political parties

23
Sequencing Political Development
  • Fourth, if not already existing (as in
    republics), there is the establishment of
    responsible government, by which monarchs and
    nobles give up their political power to elected
    governments
  • Fifth and finally, there is a slow expansion of
    voting rights until there is universal suffrage
  • Siaroff, Alan. 2005. Comparing Political Regimes.
    Peterborough Broadview Press.

24
Contemporary Democracy
25
  • Chapter 5 Democracies
  • Audience democracy? (1/1)
  • Despite the success of democracies, there is
    evidence that their
  • foundations are becoming less robust
  • Declining levels of participation and growing
    indifference to politics
  • Decreasing confidence in politics
  • As a result, decision making is more and more
    depoliticized
  • Down to citizens (referenda)
  • Up to non-political agencies (e.g. international
    organizations)
  • This replacement of representative features of
    democracy has been
  • labelled audience democracy (Manin 1997).

26
The golden straightjacket
  • "Once your country puts the Golden
    Straightjacket on, its political choices get
    reduced to Pepsi or Coke to slight nuances of
    taste, slight nuances of policy, slight
    alterations in design... but never any major
    deviation from the core golden rules. - Thomas
    Friedman

27
Forms of Authoritarian Rule
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