Politics Lecture 7 - Democratic and Authoritarian Regimes PDF

Summary

This lecture discusses the concept of democracy and authoritarian regimes. It delves into different perspectives and definitions of democracy, exploring historical and theoretical viewpoints.

Full Transcript

**[POLITICS : Session 7]** **[Democratic and Authoritarian Regimes ]** [What is democracy? ] - "No one pretends that democracy is perfect or all- wise. Indeed it has been said that **democracy is the worst form of Government except for all those other forms that have been tried from tim...

**[POLITICS : Session 7]** **[Democratic and Authoritarian Regimes ]** [What is democracy? ] - "No one pretends that democracy is perfect or all- wise. Indeed it has been said that **democracy is the worst form of Government except for all those other forms that have been tried from time to time**...." (Winston S Churchill) - Why is that quote so much with us? This form of government not ideal, but all the other are even worse; democracy best amongst the worst but negative form - *Discussion: what have democraties done to the planet?* - *Ex: situation right now somewhere \> how was before imaging quote* - *"Government of the people, by the people, for the people, shall not perish from the earth"* (Abraham Lincoln) - For the people: policies are made for the people, work for the people - Of the people: elections, link between people and leadership representation - By the people: institutions created by the people themselves - Democracy about the link with the people - Democracies generating ***Input, Throughput, Output*** legitimacy (Scharpf) - - Input: elections - Throughput: procedures followed, law making process, way institutions work - Output : (non?) effective solutions - *Ex : how can we reduce death poll in the street with school limited speed? below average level? Block street?* - *Lots of discussion during "throughput"* - *Effective if no more killings* - *Ex: CO2 % is that enough? More tools? output legitimacy (always questioned)* - *"Most effective way of ensuring that rulers do act in the interests of the ruled"?* (Garner) - Critical vision of pluralism is it true? Democracy fulfill that prompt? - In democracies, power !! - Democracy refers to a regime where power is widely spread and essentially rests with the people (**Garner**) - All should govern (gov of the people) everyone able to goven by voting, being in system - All should take decisions *(ex: Switzerland decisions also agreed by people indirectly)* possible in theory if not, chain of legitimacy : representation - All rulers should be held accountable: procedures *(ex: during elections)* - All rules should be held accountable by representatives of the ruled: checks and balances - Rulers should be chosen by the ruled: elections - Rulers should be chosen by the representatives of the ruled: *ex: parliaments* - Rulers should act in the interests of the ruled - Definition of Democracy (following **Dahl**) : A regime can be considered democratic **if** it has: - Universal male and female suffrage - Recurring, free (no manipulation *from media for ex*), competitive, fair elections - More than one political party (no choice at all) - Different and alternative sources of information (citizens being able to look for different sources) - Procedural definition of **Dahl**: - Effective participation - Voting equality - Enlightened understanding - Control of the agenda - Inclusion of adults [Classical vs Elitist Theory :] - **Classical theory of democracy** : **participation of the individual and rule of the people** - Individual freedom, political equality and ability to actively take-part in politics - Citizens develop own abilities in exchange with others, and shape political decisions - (Rationally) producing the *volonté générale (common will)* - Opportunities for direct, participatory and representative democracy - Participatory: allow in process of law-making civil society, citizens, interest groups to be taken into participation - **Elitisit theory of democracy: representation by political elites** - Ability to take part in elections and choose for political products - Apolitical individual: political elites in competition - Largely representative democracy - Def. Democracy: '**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 people's vote**.' (Schumpeter) - Important to know what definition you choose and think about it in a classical/elitist - **Complex procedural definition of Giovanni Sartori (1987):** - "large-scale democracy is a procedure and/or a mechanism that - Inclined to follow political decisions because in a democracy (directly/indirectly) "we make the laws under which we live" ( in our interest) (Garner ) - "\[...\] if we consent to the laws under which we live, the freedom existing in the state of nature would be maintained in a democratic system." (Ibid.) - Classical argument: through democratic system: able to maintain right that we have see ourselves being free - Social contract allows us/citizens to accept political decisions as decisions which serve our freedom - But: What if decisions taken do not serve our interests, if we find ourselves in a minority: Are we morally obliged to obey political decisions? (Garner) [Varieties in Democracies: ] - **Direct and Representative Democracies** - *Examples: Referenda, Representative State Organs* - **Parliamentarism, Semi-Parliamentarism, Semi-Presidentialism and Presidentialism** - *Examples: Denmark/Italy; UK/Germany*; *France; United States of America* - **Majoritarian and consensus models** - Determining criteria: composition of cabinet, domination of executive over legislature (or not), multiple party system, electoral system, dispersal of executive power, parliamentary chambers, constitutionalism, independence of central banks [Democratic challenges: ] - Problem of political equality vs political elites - Problem of direct participatory democray vs representative democracy - *Ex: Brexit direct democracy* - Problems of direct democracy : logistics and formulate question in (a not) misinterpretive way - Problem of politics of the masses vs specialized political decisions - Problem of Majoritarian vs Minority-led decision - Democracy, negative and positive freedom  how much take into account - Securing private sphere of the individual (from democratic decisions) - Enabling the individual to experience opportunities (through democratic decisions) - Justice and the boundaries of democracy - Procedural and Social Justice as obligations within democracies [New directions: ] - From *aggregation of preferences to democratic deliberation* - reasoned discussions, inclusive arenas and public spheres, mutual respect and openness - need reasons, discussions, openness to bring citizens in citizen assemblies together - From *domestic to cosmopolitan (global) democracy* - Could we go in direction of global democracy? - Installing democracy on the global 'level' of governance (democratization of international organizations) - From *democracy to ecological democracy* - Respecting the value of the environment and protecting it *from democracy* [Democratic and Authoritarian Regimes ] - **Three waves of democratization**: - 1828-1926 (US, UK, France, Switzerland, Italy, Argentina) - 1943-1962 (Brazil, W Germany, Japan, India, etc.) - 1974- (Portugal, Spain, S Korea, E Europe, etc.) - **Explanations why democratization comes about** - Economic Development (Lipset 1959, 1960) - The Rise of the Middle Class (economic power of MC rests with them and claim to have equal rights to determine future) - Democratic Transformation and 'Transitology' - Statecraft and diplomacy rather than economic pre-requisites - Focus on transitions and consolidation *(need military on board*) - Re-focus on why transitions are undermined - We need all factors ! Une image contenant texte, Police, capture d'écran, nombre Description générée automatiquement [Democratic and Authoritarian regimes ] - **Polyarchy and Liberal Democracy** - **Polyarchy** as a set of factors which allow for a competitive political landscape around free and fair elections, including elected officials, inclusive suffrage, freedom of expression, access to alternative information, associational autonomy - **Liberal Democracy (Polyarchy +) :** - Freedom and Civil Liberties (*speech, religion, political rights, property, life, death -- contested,...)* - Rule of Law (*equality before law, free access to judiciary, presumption of innocence, laws retroactively enforced,...)* checks and balances !! - Political Independence of the judiciary - Open, pluralistic civil society *~~(hungary)~~* - Freedom of minorities (*minority language in school?* ) difficulties - Civil Control over the Military (support democratic institutions) - Measuring democracies : - Freedom house - VDem - Bertelsman Transformation Index - Economist Intelligence Unit Democracy Index - Western-based, often biased approaches to democracy - But: democratizing trajectories in post-colonial states need to be taken into account - Many states still need to travel road of democracies fine line? ![](media/image11.jpg) Free: bigger Partly-free / not free gained momentum over the last 10 years democracy criticized + Declining doesn't mean not democratic anymore A lot of these have to do with the decline in the rule of law *Ex: Poland* ![](media/image14.jpg) depends on different factors in order to determine what is democracy, liberal democracy, etc *\ * struggle for/against + democratic way of being ruled *ex: Georgia* [Key developments democratization these last years: ] - Democratic Dysfunction: Social Polarization and Political Strain - Important because attracts voters : Why respect minorities if only for them? - Changing the Constitutional Balance of Power: The Role of Electoral and Legislative Majorities - The Assaults on the Horizontal Checks, Political Rights, and Civil Liberties - Backsliding in America and elsewhere? How attractive will democracy be? - Enlargement processes seen as a flagship policy of the EU, including the promotion of democracy, human rights and the rule of law - Backfire? Forces in countries wanting to join arguing against it - But: the emergence of so-called illiberal democracies (inside and outside Europe) seems to have established itself as a "new normal" - Freedom House paints a dark picture of democracy in crisis and sees, - Critical voices, seeing the transformation of Europe's Eastern countries as one of multiple streams and challenges which may not always happen at the same time - Despite democratization, **authoritarian regimes** have always been around - The term can be used for a variety of states around the world (see Garner et al. 2023, p.377) - Coercion, threats and terror =\> limited individual and group rights - Legitimization (often) needed and seeked for by authoritarian rulers - To maintain power - Hybridity (in case that elections are held) - Popular acceptance of authoritarian regimes (see Garner et al. 2023, p.374- ![](media/image16.jpg) ***Polarization, populism and the rise of autocracy*** *\ * - **What is populism? Is it a factor showing** - (Right-wing) populism (see also Mudde 2016, pp. 6-7) - *Belief in Populism*: politics should be done by and for 'the pure people' (vs. the corrupt elite') - *Belief in Nativism*: homogeneity of the nation, states to be inhabited by the nation - *Belief in Authoritarianism*: infringement of authority needs punishment Assume a perfect undemocratic society Should we democratize ? *Ex: Singapore; try to convince it to become democratic* - **Habits and opinions** matter to identify politics and political life - **Social values** that impact on political culture *For ex: protestant vs catholic Europe* - **Differences of political cultures** and how they are being used/turned against: - Chinese cultural ervolution - Russia: struggle of Russian identity and its place in the world - Importance of **Non-Western political ideas and cultures** **Liberal democracy:** "freedom, voice, compromise" - Freedom: individual rights and freedom - Voice: views, demands and accountability through electoral processes - Compromise: electoral competition and no permanent authority leads governments to take into account different opinions and develop compromises **Liberal democracy** as "veiled oppression" : - Individual freedoms are undesirable - Freedom as 'opressive' because "collective strengths" need to be the objective - The "real people" - Spiritual guidance rather than individuality - Democracy's real face: market access **Militant democracy** : Everyone to the debate *Parliamentary threshold* UE? Big debate lose plurality and fully competitive pluritical landscape

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