Autocracies not only resist the global spread of democracy but are sources of autocratic influence and pressure. This book presents a conceptual model to understand, assess, and explain the promotion and diffusion of authoritarian elements.
Employing a cross-regional approach, leading experts empirically test the concept of authoritarian gravity centers (AGCs), defined as "regimes that constitute a force of attraction and contagion for countries in geopolitical proximity." With an analysis extending across Latin America, the Middle East, Eastern Europe, Central Asia, and Asia, these AGCs are shown to be effective as active promoters (push) or as neutral sources of attraction (pull). The authors contend that the influence of exogenous factors, along with international and regional contexts for the transformation of regime types, is vital to understanding and analyzing the transmission of autocratic institutional settings, ideas, norms, procedures, and practices, thus explaining the regional clustering of autocracies. It is the regional context in which external actors can influence authoritarian processes most effectively.
Authoritarian Gravity Centers is a vibrant and comprehensive contribution to the growing field of autocratization, which will be of great interest to undergraduate and postgraduate students of comparative area studies, illiberalism, international politics, and studies of democracy.
Author(s): Marianne Kneuer and Thomas Demmelhuber
Series: Conceptualising Comparative Politics: Polities, Peoples, and Markets 11
Publisher: Routledge
Year: 2020
Cover
Half Title
Series Page
Title Page
Copyright Page
Table of Contents
List of Illustrations
Figures
2.1 Modes of External Influence: The Concept Tree
2.2 Analytical Model
3.1 Autocratization in the GCC – Scores on the Democracy Status (Bertelsmann Transformation Index)
3.2 Gradation of Saudi Influence Toward its GCC Fellows
4.1 The Development of the Democratic Status According to the BTI (2003–2016)
8.1 Meetings of the CCP-ID with Party and Non-Party Representatives in Asia, 2002–2017
8.2 Heatmap of the CCP-ID’s Activities in Asia by Country, 2002–2017
8.3 CCP-ID Contact with Government and Opposition Parties for Different Political Regime Types, 2002–2017
Tables
2.1 Sub-Mechanisms: Methods, Instruments, and Coercion
4.1 Steps in the Constitutional Reform Process in Venezuela, Ecuador, and Bolivia
4.2 Empirical Results of Autocracy Promotion and Diffusion in Latin America
6.1 Comparing the Russia Model to Fidesz’s Strategy of Democratic Erosion
9.1 SCO Evolution of Membership, Observer, and Dialogue Partner Status
Preface
Part I: Concept
1 Autocratization and Its Pull and Push Factors – A Challenge for Comparative Research
2 Conceptualizing Authoritarian Gravity Centers: Sources and Addressees, Mechanisms and Motives of Authoritarian Pressure and Attraction
Part II: Empirical Studies on Authoritarian Gravity Centers: Saudi Arabia, Venezuela, and Kazakhstan
3 Kingdom of Gravity: Autocratic Promotion and Diffusion in Saudi Arabia
4 Democratic Erosion and Autocratization in Latin America: The Role of Venezuela as an Authoritarian Gravity Center
5 Kazakhstan: A Possible Future Authoritarian Gravity Center?
Part III: The International Dimension of Authoritarianism Revisited
6 Russia’s Effects on a Consolidated Democracy: The Erosion of Democracy in Hungary and the Putin Model
7 Iran and Its Neighbors: Military Assistance as Support for Authoritarianism
8 Networking with Chinese Characteristics: China’s Party-to-Party Relations in Asia
9 Spreading Cyber-Autocracy? The Shanghai Cooperation Organization and the Diffusion of Norms of “Internet Sovereignty”
Part IV: Authoritarian Gravity Centers in Cross-Regional Comparison
10 Authoritarian Gravity Centers in Cross-Regional Comparison: Future Studies and the International Dimension of Authoritarianism
Notes on Contributors
Index