Why Wait for Democracy?
One after another, arguments that non-Western countries are not “ready” for democracy have been upended by experience.
When Arab societies rose up and toppled four dictators during 2011—in Tunisia, Egypt, Yemen, and Libya—people around the world joined in the celebration. Yet soon after the autocrats’ fall, a wave of apprehension washed over many in the policy and intellectual elite in the United States, Europe, and the Middle East itself. The warnings and reservations were variations on a theme: Arabs are not ready for democracy. They have no experience with it and don’t know how to make it work. Islam is inclined toward violence, intolerance, and authoritarian values. People will vote radical and Islamist parties into power, and the regimes that ultimately emerge will be theocracies or autocracies, not democracies.
The cultural argument has often morphed into a second set of concerns. This is not the right time to be pushing for democracy in the region, the complaint goes. Democratization in the Arab world could endanger the fragile peace between Israel and Arab states such as Egypt and Jordan. Or it could threaten American security partnerships in the war on terror. What restive Arab countries should be focusing on, and what the West should be encouraging, are political stability and economic development. Maybe someday, when they have a much larger middle class, democracy will be a safer, more viable option.
These doubts about the suitability of democracy for other peoples are far from new. From the era of Western colonial domination well into what became known as “the Third Wave” of global democratization (which began with the Portuguese Revolution in 1974), writers and policymakers questioned whether democracy could travel beyond the West. They not only questioned whether other cultures (and religions) could sustain democracy, but also whether it was in the West’s interest to have these other countries governed on the basis of elections that might mobilize the passions of the uneducated and poorly informed “masses.” Moreover, there was an empirical basis for this skepticism. Although democracy had emerged during the post–World War II era in a few developing countries such as India, Sri Lanka, Costa Rica, and Botswana, most of the newly decolonized states had fairly quickly settled into authoritarian patterns of governance. During the Cold War, many countries were, in effect, forced to choose between becoming a right-wing, often military autocracy backed by the West or a socialist one-party state, frequently born of violent revolution, backed by the Soviet Union and China.
The cultural arguments against the prospects for democracy in developing nations were the most tenacious, and they came both from the West and from political and intellectual leaders in the developing world. Latin America came into focus first because of its many Marxist insurgencies, left-wing populist movements, and military coups in the 1960s and ’70s. During most of the Cold War, many conservative scholars and writers in the United States dismissed the idea of establishing democracy in the region as infeasible (or at least contrary to American interests, since it would mean sacrificing U.S. ties to friendly anticommunist autocrats). Because of their long histories of centralized, absolutist rule deriving from their experience of Spanish or Portuguese imperial rule and the hierarchical and authoritarian traditions of the Catholic Church, the Latin American countries were said to lack the emphasis on individual freedom, the willingness among their citizens to question authority, and the appreciation of pluralism and equality necessary to sustain democracy. Similar arguments were made about Asia and the Middle East. “Asian values” and Islamic culture were seen to value order over freedom, consensus over competition, and the community over the individual. They not only lacked the intrinsic suspicion of authority that buoyed democracy in the West, it was said, but practiced a deference to authority that answered “deep psychological cravings for the security of dependency,” in the words of Lucian Pye, one of the most respected scholars of Asian political cultures. Elie Kedourie, a famous British historian of the Middle East, dismissed “the political traditions of the Arab world—which are the political traditions of Islam,” as completely lacking any understanding of “the organizing ideas of constitutional and representative government.”
In his influential 1996 book The Clash of Civilizations, the American political scientist Samuel Huntington warned more generally of “fundamental [civilizational] divides.” He stressed the cultural distinctiveness of the West, “most notably its Christianity, pluralism, individualism, and the rule of law,” adding that “Western civilization,” in its commitment to liberal democratic values, “is valuable not because it is universal but because it is unique.
Though they were not intended for this purpose, such cultural arguments served well the purposes of autocrats looking to justify their rule. If democracy was unsuitable for their countries, why should these leaders be expected to introduce it? If a strong hand were needed to deliver order and development, they would provide it. And in Asia, some of them did. Authoritarian rulers such as Chiang Kai-shek in Taiwan (r. 1950–75), Park Chung Hee in South Korea (r. 1961–79), and Lee Kuan Yew in Singapore (r. 1959–90) delivered rapid development. Under Mahathir bin Mohamad, Malaysia followed this path for more than two decades beginning in 1981, as did Indonesia for most of Suharto’s three decades in power after 1967. Lee was the most outspoken in promoting the “Asian values” of order, family, authority, and community over what he saw as the indiscipline and loose morals of the West, asserting both that Asians had different values and that they were not ready for democracy.
Lee’s arguments carried great weight globally and within Singapore because he delivered for his people. More broadly, the success of the East Asian “miracle” states led many scholars during the 1960s and ’70s to sing the praises of these regimes’ remarkably quick economic growth. The lack of popular sovereignty and political accountability, the abuses of human rights and the rule of law—these were prices that perhaps had to be paid in order to achieve development. Looking at the chronic political instability and relatively poor economic performance of countries such as the Philippines and Argentina that tried to make democracy work during the 1960s, many commentators concluded that autocracies were the better bet for development, and that political repression was a necessary evil that had to be endured along the way. Often, from the late 1950s through the ’80s, the comparison between China and India was cited. While India was growing at the “Hindu rate of growth,” China was making dramatic progress in improving education and health care. (The fact that China had suffered famines under Mao Zedong, who was responsible for the deaths of tens of millions of innocent Chinese, while famine never gripped democratic India, was glossed over.) But there were other unfavorable comparisons. After Brazil’s generals seized power in 1964 following a chaotic period of multiparty competition, the country’s unfolding “economic miracle” and the comparison with the turbulent and polarized politics of Chile and Argentina (until their militaries intervened in 1973 and 1976, respectively) also seemed to underscore the authoritarian advantage.
Two schools of thought in the social sciences fed into this debate. Those in the modernization school, led by thinkers such as Seymour Martin Lipset, argued theoretically and showed statistically that poor countries were unlikely to sustain democracy; if they would first acquire the facilitating conditions—widespread education, a large middle class, an independent civil society, and liberal democratic values—then democracy would be more viable. The implication—at least as it was drawn out by some politicians and intellectuals in the West and elsewhere, even though it was never Lipset’s argument—was that there was a necessary, if unfortunate, sequence to development: First, countries had to grow rich under authoritarian rule; then they would be able to sustain democracy.
The second intellectual tradition was dependency theory, which insisted that Third World countries were poor because the West had trapped them in a structural condition of economic dependence and servitude (a modern form of imperialism). To break out, argued theorists such as Andre Gunder Frank, Walter Rodney, and Immanuel Wallerstein (who spawned a related body of “world systems theory”), peripheral countries needed to concentrate power, assert control over their natural resources, seize and redistribute land, expel multinational corporations or expropriate their holdings, renegotiate unfair terms of trade, and sideline a domestic business class that was doing the bidding of foreign governments and business interests. While (socialist) dictatorship was not necessarily the political prescription of this school, its critical analysis tended to reinforce the narratives and legitimize the claims of Marxist revolutionary movements and one-party dictatorships.
When the Third Wave of democracy began in the mid-1970s, democracy seemed to be where the world had been or where the West had settled, but not where the rest of the world was going. In a pair of widely noted works, two of the most eminent political scientists of the time, Robert Dahl and Samuel Huntington, dismissed the prospects for significant democratic expansion. Given chronic poverty, Cold War competition, and “the unreceptivity to democracy of several major cultural traditions,” Huntington speculated in a 1984 Political Science Quarterly article, “the limits of democratic development in the world may well have been reached.”
The developments of the last four decades, however, have proved the skeptics wrong. Even as Huntington was writing the words quoted above, a wave of democratic expansion was gathering momentum, which Huntington himself would document and analyze definitively just seven years later in his influential book The Third Wave: Democratization in the Late Twentieth Century. In the decade following his 1984 article, the world witnessed the greatest expansion of democracy in history, as political freedom spread from southern Europe and Latin America to Asia, then central and eastern Europe, then Africa. By the mid-1990s, three of every five states in the world were democracies—a proportion that persists more or less to this day.
While it remains true that democracy is more sustainable at higher levels of development, an unprecedented number of poor countries adopted democratic forms of government during the 1980s and ’90s, and many of them have sustained democracy for well over a decade. These include several African countries, such as Ghana, Benin, and Senegal, and one of the poorest Asian countries, Bangladesh. Other very poor countries, such as East Timor, Sierra Leone, and Liberia, are now using the political institutions of democracy as they rebuild their economies and states after civil war. Although the world has been in a mild democratic recession since about 2006, with reversals concentrated disproportionately in low-income and lower-middle-income states, a significant number of democracies in these income categories continue to function.
The lower- and middle-income democracies that did come through the last two decades intact have shown that authoritarianism confers no intrinsic developmental advantage. For every Singapore-style authoritarian economic “miracle,” there have been many more instances of implosion or stagnation—as in Zaire, Zimbabwe, North Korea, and (until recently) Burma— resulting from predatory authoritarian rule. Numerous studies have shown that democracies do a better job of reducing infant mortality and protecting the environment, and recent evidence from sub-Saharan Africa (see, for example, economist Steven Radelet’s 2010 book Emerging Africa: How Seventeen Countries are Leading the Way) shows that the highest rates of economic growth in Africa since the mid-1990s have generally occurred in the democratic states. Once they achieved democracy, South Korea and Taiwan continued to record brisk economic growth. When the G-20 was formed at the end of the ’90s out of the old G-8 organization of the world’s major economies, eight of the 10 emerging-market countries that joined were democracies, including India, Indonesia, Brazil, Turkey, and South Korea.
Further refuting the skeptics, democracy has taken root or at least been embraced by every major cultural group, not just the societies of the West with their Protestant traditions. Most Catholic countries are now democracies, and very stable ones at that. Democracy has thrived in a Hindu state, Buddhist states, and a Jewish state. And many predominantly Muslim countries, such as Turkey, Bangladesh, Senegal, and Indonesia, have by now had significant and mainly positive experience with democracy.
Finally, the claim that democracy was unsuitable for these other cultures—that their peoples did not value democracy as those in the West did—has been invalidated, both by experience and by a profusion of public opinion survey data showing that the desire for democracy is very much a global phenomenon. Although there is wide variation across countries and regions, with low levels of trust in parties and politicians in the wealthier democracies of Asia, Latin America, and postcommunist Europe, people virtually everywhere say they prefer democracy to authoritarianism. What people want is not a retreat to dictatorship but a more accountable and deeper democracy.
Despite the persistence of authoritarianism under Hugo Chávez in Venezuela, and the authoritarian tendencies of left-wing populist presidents in Bolivia, Ecuador, and Nicaragua, the bigger story in Latin America has been democratic resilience and deepening. Chile and Uruguay have become stable liberal democracies, Brazil has made dramatic democratic and economic progress, and even once chronically unstable Peru has seen three successive democratically elected presidents deliver brisk economic growth with declining poverty rates. In fact, Latin America is the only region of the world where income inequality has decreased in the last decade.
The new popular embrace of democracy is particularly striking in sub-Saharan Africa, where five rounds of the Afrobarometer opinion surveys have uncovered a surprisingly robust public commitment to democracy. In 2008, an average of 70 percent of Africans surveyed across 19 countries expressed support for democracy as always the best form of government. But only 59 percent perceived that they had in their country a full or almost full democracy, and only 49 percent were satisfied with how democracy was working in their country. This finding simply does not fit with the image of a passive and deferential populace ready to exchange freedom for bread. In Africa, people have learned through bitter experience that without democracy they will have neither freedom nor bread.
Throughout most of the non-Western world, majorities of the public have come to see that the right to choose and replace their leaders in competitive, free, and fair elections is fundamental to the achievement and defense of all other rights. This is strikingly the case now in the Arab world, where the Arab Barometer surveys show that upward of 80 percent of the citizens of most countries name democracy as the best form of government, even if they do not define democracy in fully liberal and secular terms.
It is much too early to know the fate of the popular movements for freedom in the Arab world, and we should not minimize the continuing assault on movements for democracy and accountability in countries as diverse as Venezuela, Russia, and Iran. Over the last decade there has been a slowly rising tide of democratic breakdowns, and more reversals could follow due to corruption and abuse of power by elected rulers. But the data show that popular attitudes and values are not the principal problem, and there is little evidence to support the claim that postponing democracy in favor of strongman rule will make things better. The people of Burma have made that point repeatedly at the polls and on the streets, and finally their rulers seem to be listening to them. The best way to democracy is through democracy.
Photograph: In the notorious Port-au-Prince slum of Cité Soleil, voters cast their ballots in Haiti’s 2006 national elections. Charles Eckert / Redux
Full text PDF available here.
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Larry Diamond is a senior fellow at the Hoover Institution and the Freeman Spogli Institute at Stanford University. He is also coeditor of the Journal of Democracy.
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The opinions expressed here are solely those of the author and in no way represent the views or opinions of the Woodrow Wilson International Center for Scholars. This section is moderated by Wilson Quarterly staff.
Are we a democracy?
Your article raises great points, and while I can agree with much of it, I just keep thinking, Is the US really a democracy? For example; as a country we have experienced an increasing poorer population, with pay checks not keeping up with inflation, with a few benefitting at the cost of millions of people and no way to prosecute them, with an entire street lined with highly paid individuals that have special access to the people that make the change politically, with political races costing so much that funding from corporations and wealthy individuals receive special gratitude, because, after all, it is not the many that to this moment, affect change, it is the wealthy.They are intertwined with our elected so much that even the very well meaning are going to have to fight hard, and they are going to lose. Yes, I believe the occupy movement brought to light what many felt, I know first hand, they continue to fight for peoples homes and to enact more judicious laws. It is in vain, although I participate, as I fear the Military- Industrial -Complex has a great hold over us. When I know first hand so many that have lost homes, so many that can’t find work-many with BA and Masters’ Degrees, to see my standard of living decline and certainly so for my young adult sons-who have worked and gone to school without a gleem of getting ahead since they were 15, the rate of pay for coorporate executives increaing 5000%, the monopolies being created in the internet area, the decline in our education-which, if you look at what percentage of money that has gone to it, there would be no question why it declines, but that is always tossed aside, the wars waged for businesses and the way we have thousands, probably millions of jobs that have been shipped over seas, and I could go on, there is no question in my mind that true democracy hangs by a thread in our country. Perhaps it should? Perhaps a true Democracy always folds in on itself. Yet I do finally understand the words "Give me liberty or give me death” I am willing to die for the cause of true liberty-no, I dont want to, but I have seen the effects of Democracy gone wrong and really it does come down to just that. We are not quite there to start up a revolution. If they ban guns that the criminals will just get any way, we may see a movement towards it. To control a people, control and diminish their education, check, being done, take over the food supply, check, being done, take away their liberties-look at any airport and read over the freedom act to know that is happening, Keep them poor, check-working on that while our government is so perplexed how to govern they are doing nothing. Thats because they are owned and we have allowed it by the decline in unions, not education ourselves, and allowing this group of corporations and individuals to make the rules. Did you know you can’t even plant your own corn seed as it will blow over and contaminate Mosantos’ billion dollar babies? and last, control the money-the central fed is the biggest mistake we have made, when nixon stopped making it a gold backed dollar in 1971, 2nd biggest. now they just print more. We have no way to pay back the whole deficit as there is not enough cash, oh , print some more you say,,you see my point. The central fed is a private corporation that has exploded in wealth. yet they just cant find the money to work out a loan that would keep people in their house. That could pretty easily be done you know, and it is not happening. This is not the picture of Democracy, or at least of Democracy working well.
Posted by: ann steinke | 2/26/13
Turkey is democratic?
But Turkey has not been fully democratic. Let us understand the background. Tuekey has banned a number of political parties over the course of many, many decades, and has had several military coups. True, Turkey has come to the point of a certain Muslim consensus, but that has been possible only because it committed genocide against its millions of indigenous Christians such as Assyrians, Greeks, and Armenians. Indeed, the man your journal and organization are named after, President Woodrow Wilson, knew all about these thing. By the Treaty of Sevres he delineated the borders of Armenia, with a Kurdistan just south of it, in what is now eastern Turkey. These are people and countries which have never had a say in Turkey's "democracy."
Posted by: Vicky G. | 2/28/13
Why Wait for Democracy?
This article presents a straw man argument. It does not address either the failures of the Arab Spring or the responsibility of democratization advocates for bringing to power regimes that are more authoritarian, intolerant, and inhumane than ones they replace. For example: despite an Academy Award for Argo, awarded on national television by First Lady Michelle Obama, the Iranian case of democratic revolution yielding Islamist terror is not discussed by Diamond. Is he unaware of what followed the fall of the Shah? Or, does he deliberately suppress cases that contradict his claims? Iran has provided a template for the Arab Spring. Is this really in US interests? Does it, in fact, promote true democracy or human rights? Diamond and his fellow apologists may double down on a failed democratization policy in the Wilson Quarterly, perhaps out of vanity, but the blood of its victims cannot be washed from their hands.
Posted by: Laurence Jarvik | 2/28/13
Weaseling...
Mr. Diamond conflates democracy and theocracy at the end, after pointedly differentiating them at the beginning.
Posted by: Ormond Otvos | 2/28/13
Democracy vs. Strongman
I trust other readers more sophisticated than I can explain that the American experiment began as a republic, where only qualified stakeholders voted, and they voted for (1) Representatives who spoke for them in the House of Representatives, (2) State Legislators who then selected Senators, (3) Electors who met and selected the president and vice-president. Supreme Court appointments were made by the president, chosen by the Electors, with the consent of the Senators, selected by the peoples' representatives in their state legislators. While we have, to the good, eliminated race and gender as voter-qualification tests, I don't know that eliminating property and literacy tests--rather than eliminating the abusive use of those tests to disenfranchise unpopular groups (e.g., Irish and blacks)--is to the good. Again, others with more knowledge can share those facts, but it's not clear that directly electing senators, presidents, and vice-presidents--about whom most voters know very little, even if they were knowledgeable about the issues--is better than having these officials elected by state legislators and electors about whom voters can know a lot more (I understand we still have an electoral college which officially votes for the president and vice-president, but in fact, the votes are cast for the candidates and Electors have no meaningful role in the elections). We present a false choice to developing nations when we talk about dictators vs. democracies: the better choice might be a republic with representatives selected by knowledgeable voters. (I ignore the tough issue of wealth as a qualifying criteria for voters. If "taxation without representation" means anything, it must require some sort of wealth qualification for voters. This is less of an issue when government takes five percent of the peoples' production than when it takes twenty or thirty percent of their production, more if the cost of regulatory compliance is included. Without a wealth qualification for voters or some other limitation on government expansion, the less wealthy majority of voters may be tempted to use the power of the state to take what they wish from the more wealthy minority, with unsurprising consequences for fiscal growth and stability.)
Posted by: Jim Call | 3/1/13
Are We a Democracy
Mr. Diamond, we are not a democracy in the true sense of the word; we are a republic. With that said, we can at least loosely call the United States a democracy. The frustrating part of that statement is, of course, that the structure from the very beginning of our "beloved" country favored the rich, for example in the beginning only landed gentlemen could vote. And yes, we have broadened our scope for those eligible to vote. However, we all know that the money interests through allowed lobbying still primarily run the country subsequent to our "republican" vote. And don't forget that there are many states such as mine (Oregon) where the independent is not allowed to vote in the primaries. It seems to me that we have an capitalistic totalitarian form of democracy, which is better than most governments, but perhaps not all. I do remind everyone who reads this post that I am not complaining with tears in my eyes, but just reminding everyone that it is the rich who usually control no matter the form of government.
Posted by: John Mears | 3/9/13
China
China proves the author wrong. The ordinary Chinese citizens I know do not believe they are capable of living in a free society and if they believe this then of course they are right. The time may come when Chinese citizenry matures and will not need authoritarian rule but not in my lifetime.
Posted by: Michael Edgar | 3/10/13
Complete nonsense
Let us let the Middle East destroy themselves, and buy their oil if we need it. These religious dictatorships are comploetely hopeless.
Posted by: Emil Hurtik | 3/10/13
Complete nonsense
Let us allow the Middle East religious dictatorships fight their wars and destroy themselves and buy their oil if we need it. It will be cheaper.
Posted by: Emil Hurtik | 3/10/13
The US is most unusual in that it achieved a workable democracy at its first attempt. Britain, by contrast, went through a full-scale civil war and several government-shaking insurrections before achieving a universal franchise. Most European nations have a history of failed attempts at a lasting democracy; and it's only by adopting the models born out of bloodshed and error that some of the newer democracies have managed to avoid disaster. Remember too that many of our most prominent democracies disenfranchised half their populations up to a hundred years ago or less. To regard the Arab Spring as the final step towards democracy is cruel and disappointing, but as a first step it's a very important one. The most important lesson the Middle East may learn from successful revolutions is that revolutions can succeed.
Posted by: Jon Jermey | 3/11/13
Why impose your norms on others?
I always wonder why western countries want to impose their norms on non western countries?Is real democracy working in western countries.How can Gorge Bush was elected by malpractice?Most intelligent people of west are hypocrite they are democratic in home and tyrant to other nation, there rich so want other to obey them.Might is always right is there motto.,They never consider psyche of other people their culture civilization can develop other way of rule their nation. not giving freedom to other nation to develop their way life.and be happy
Posted by: Ramesh Raghuvanshi | 3/11/13
Democracy
Since the USA has been instrumental through the CIA in overthrowing several duly elected democratic governments I must agree that these governments have not been ready for democracy until a proper counterforce to the machinations of US policy can be obtained. Venezuela has managed so far but with the death of its president there is no doubt the USA will make its accustomed moves.
Posted by: Sand | 3/11/13
Democracy
No society is ready for democracy. Democracy fools us into thinking that We are the government, that We have power. We're not, We don't. The government is and always will be the State, unless we get rid of it. I'll take anarchy.
Posted by: robzrob | 3/11/13
Civil Society?
Applying the term "democracy" to countries so varied as contemporary Turkey, Bangladesh, Senegal, and Indonesia suggests that this can describe any nation that is currently more or less functioning without a dictator. To suggest that one can develop "democracy" or any particular form of government from an abstract blueprint in all places without consideration of civil society is to claim that there is no connection between social organization and political expression. Mr. Diamond's argument would make more sense if he could define his concept of democracy and explain what enabled nations with different levels of development and different civil societies to approximate this ideal.
Posted by: Carl Bankston | 3/11/13
not ready
This troubled me since the GW Bush 2nd Inaugural. I do think all people want freedom. And I do think all people want to have a (democratic) say in their government. The question is, are they willing to let OTHERS be free and have their say too? I think all of the evidence, rather than our own hopes, bears out that many peoples are not ready to respect the rights of women, minority groups, or simply those they disagree with. Until you have a society that allows for the peaceful political resolution of problems along with a rock-solid belief in natural rights for all - democracy is going to fail in many places. The culture comes before the political institution. And many of them have a long, long road to travel.
Posted by: catopublius | 3/11/13
Inbreeding v. outbreeding
The writer and his readers might consider the cultural effects of inbreeding in most traditional societies, especially in Africa, as it influences the chances for their transitioning to a liberal society. It turns out the West is quite unique in that regard, something we are only beginning to understand. See here: http://hbdchick.wordpress.com/2011/04/04/whatever-happened-to-european-tribes/
Posted by: Luke Lea | 3/11/13
democracy in the Middle East
I believe democracy is a stage of evolution, after monarchy. The way it goes is: tribal > monarchial > plural. In a place that is only recently tribal, a place without a national identity, a monarch is necessary to hold it together. All nations evolved this way. For a new nation that was only recently a collection of tribes, democracy is premature and leads to chaos (Palestinian territories, Pakistan, Iraq, Libya). Democracy is the trend, but it takes a while, centuries in some cases, for national identity to take root.
Posted by: Andrew Maxwell | 3/11/13
Re: Why Wait for Democracy?
Re: Laurence Jarvik's comment on the Iranian Revolution being a "template" for Arab Spring. It certainly might be as much as the French Revolution was a "template" for further democratic movements in continental Europe, or elsewhere for that matter. As in, there is certainly much to fear from political instability; citizens and political leaders should be vigilant that their democratic movements not devolve into tyranny (of the mob, military strongman, or religious authority). But to argue that Iran's experience somehow can predict the future of democracy in all or even most Muslim majority nations is absurd. The road to democracy is clearly not easy, predictable, or without pitfalls. Each country will have its own experience. The historical context of someplace like Tunisia, is vastly different than that of Iran.
Posted by: Lauren Friend | 3/12/13
Yes Turkey is democratic
Whatever human rights abuses have been committed in Turkey, it has a responsive government accountable to its people. Thats democracy. The same way the U.S is a democracy despite its history of slavery and persecution of its native peoples.
Posted by: Oz | 3/12/13
China
You don't seem to really address the new overlords of much of the world.
Posted by: Nels | 3/12/13
Democracy does not guarantee good government
Whatever political system a country adopts should be one that gives it the best chance to throw up good leaders and a good government - a government that raises the standard of living of its people. Democracy does not guarantee that. In the US, the person who gets elected as President, is one who has the best spin doctors, support of its media barons and money bags. Even a person like Sarah Palin could get as far as she did. The freedoms that America cherishes, if exported indiscriminately, will bring grief to a country not suited for such a system of government. Indeed William Blum calls it the US's deadliest export. After 40-50 years of the US style of presidential government, one wonders whether countries like the Philippines, South Korea and Taiwan could be called models of democracy worthy of emulation, let alone the recent recruits like Iraq, Afghanistan, Tunisia and Libya. I doubt many countries can survive the crimes, violence, drug and gun culture and aggressive individual supremacy over the community's interests that we see in the US. Democracy is not working even in the US.
Posted by: Chen Nian | 3/14/13
Muslims can't handle democracy
Egypt a perfect example: throw out one muslim dictator, replace with another. Libya: throw out a muslim dictator, replace with several muslim militias all vying for power. Somalia: which muslim group is in charge there? Syria: Muslim dictator very slowly going down, and no democratic group in place - or even in sight - to replace said dictator. The very fabric of the muslim religion does not admit of the possibility of democracy, free speech, minority rights, freedom of religion, and other things that we hold dear. And how long does anyone think it will be before Iraq succumbs to another dictator?
Posted by: M Koonce | 3/15/13
This Article is Absurd
This article is absurd. The United States itself is not even ready for democracy. That's why we have so many agencies to protect us from ourselves. The closer a State approaches democracy, the closer it comes to its own annihilation.
Posted by: Patrick Acree | 3/19/13
Why wait for democracy?
You may expect too much of democracy. Democracy is all about "who" governs, not what the various policies might be. The fault, Dear Brutus, lies not in our stars, but in ourselves...Most truly elected governments reflect the populations they represent faithfully.
Posted by: Robert Albritton | 3/22/13
Definitions of democracy
Larry Diamond writes: "Although democracy had emerged during the post–World War II era in a few developing countries such as India, Sri Lanka, Costa Rica, and Botswana, most of the newly decolonized states had fairly quickly settled into authoritarian patterns of governance" This appears to muddle together: -- democracy and independence (decolonisation); -- civilization and "development" India is the simplest example, perhaps because of its complexity and because of its difference from the American template of development, democracy, and civilization. In 1900 India was not an electoral democracy, yet was recognized by its British rulers as a distinct civilization (or cluster of older civilizations) and yet not a colony, its government having a measure of autonomy those of Nigeria or Jamaica did not. Reflecting this, India took part in the Imperial Conferences held from 1887 onwards on an equal footing with the other "dominions," Canada, Australia and so on. Those former colonies were by 1900 genuinely self-governing democracies, if constitutional monarchies on the British pattern. For example, the governments of 1914 agreed that when Britain proclaimed war against the Central Powers, Canada was thus committed to war; but in 1939 the Canadian parliament convened in special session to vote on going to war, several days after Britain's ultimatum to Germany had expired. Dominion politicians negotiated the exact character of their independence at the inter-war imperial (Commonwealth) conferences, and nailed down the details in the 1931 Statute of Westminster. Not until the postwar 1940s did they legislate to define national citizenship as different from being "British subjects" as heretofore. All this may nowadays seem very "unAmerican:" but the participants thought of themselves as belonging to the British tradition, not the American, even as they sought to distance themselves from the "mother country." As an experienced traveler, Rudyard Kipling spotted this point as early as 1897, thus wrote for Canada: Daughter I am in my mother's house, But mistress in my own. India in 1947 was not independent but was in most respects highly "developed" (with an Indian civil service, Indian army, Indian navy etc., as well as a national infrastructure of railways, universities, mail and taxation) despite being a federation of literally hundreds of states, some republics and others ruled by autocratic princes (with their own armies or customs posts) and India was at the same time partly integrated into the global British empire of the period (with its own Cabinet minister in London and its own seat at the international conferences which created the United Nations and other organizations.) It became constitutionally independent as a federal republic, and even negotiated partition from new Parkistan as well as old Burma, without ever invoking American institutions or American history. India had its own history and institutional models, some adapted or imposed from imperial Britain but others integral to India's ancient history, symbolized in the new national symbols, Ashoka's ancient lion images and Gandhi's new or counter-revolutionary spinning wheel. No less could be said about Diamond's other citations. Sri Lanka was at independence in 1948 a democracy, but many of its democratic institutions collapsed during the war of Tamil secession in the 1990s. Costa Rica was a model of democracy since 1838, a century before "the post–World War II era," famously abolished its national army in 1949, after a brief civil war, and whether rich or poor has long ranked high in the UN Human Development Index. Botswana is very different, having been a British protectorate (as distinct from a colony) which maintained its tribal structure, so that at independence in 1966 the population elected as president of its republic the tribal chief who had in the 1950s failed to win London's recognition as a king. However impoverished, its social arrangements seem to suit the people. In the succeeding decades, despite massive illiteracy, many regional languages and multiple "communal" religions and rioting between them, India functioned to Indians' general satisfaction as a unified country, as a democracy, and as a significant economic and political power.
Posted by: Don Phillipson | 4/1/13