The last fifteen years have witnessed a "democratic recession." Democracies previously thought to be well-established—Hungary, Poland, Brazil, and even the United States—have been threatened by the rise of ultra-nationalist and populist leaders who pay lip-service to the will of the people while daily undermining the freedom and pluralism that are the foundations of democratic governance. The possibility of democratic collapse where we least expected it has added new urgency to the age-old inquiry into how democracy, once attained, can be made to last.
In Democracy in Hard Places, Scott Mainwaring and Tarek Masoud bring together a distinguished cast of contributors to illustrate how democracies around the world continue to survive even in an age of democratic decline. Collectively, they argue that we can learn much from democratic survivals that were just as unexpected as the democratic erosions that have occurred in some corners of the developed world. Just as social scientists long believed that well-established, Western, educated, industrialized, and rich democracies were immortal, so too did they assign little chance of democracy to countries that lacked these characteristics. And yet, in defiance of decades of social science wisdom, many countries that were bereft of these hypothesized enabling conditions for democracy not only achieved it, but maintained it year after year. How does democracy persist in countries that are ethnically heterogenous, wracked by economic crisis, and plagued by state weakness? What is the secret of democratic longevity in hard places?
This book—the first to date to systematically examine the survival persistence of unlikely democracies—presents nine case studies in which democracy emerged and survived against the odds. Adopting a comparative, cross-regional perspective, the authors derive lessons about what makes democracy stick despite tumult and crisis, economic underdevelopment, ethnolinguistic fragmentation, and chronic institutional weakness. By bringing these cases into dialogue with each other, Mainwaring and Masoud derive powerful theoretical lessons for how democracy can be built and maintained in places where dominant social science theories would cause us to least expect it.
Author(s): Scott Mainwaring, Tarek Masoud
Publisher: Oxford University Press
Year: 2022
Language: English
Pages: 329
City: New York
Contents
List of Figures
List of Tables
Acknowledgments
Contributors
Abbreviations
1. Introduction: Democracy in Hard Places • Tarek Masoud and Scott Mainwaring
2. India’s Democratic Longevity and Its Troubled Trajectory • Ashutosh Varshney
3. The Politics of Permanent Pitfalls: Historical Inheritances and Indonesia’s Democratic Survival • Dan Slater
4. Africa’s Democratic Outliers: Success amid Challenges in Benin and South Africa • Rachel Beatty Riedl
5. Georgia, Moldova, and Ukraine: Democratic Moments in the Former Soviet Union • Lucan Ahmad Way
6. The Puzzle of Timor-Leste • Nancy Bermeo
7. Economic Crises, Military Rebellions, and Democratic Survival: Argentina, 1983– 2021 • Scott Mainwaring and Emilia Simison
8. Why Democracies Survive in Hard Places • Scott Mainwaring
References
Index