Final POLI 359 Flashcards
Regime
mode of governance determines:
where power is located and how it is used
whose interests/goals served
transition of power
decision making
pattern of repression
regime type can be autocratic or democratic
democratic : rules and norms dictate that the public has a large role in the governance of the state. high degree of individual freedom and liberty but not all democratic regimes are the same.
Autonomy and Capacity
Capacity: the ability of the state to carry out basic tasks. it requires organization and legitimacy to form and enact policy.
Autonomy: ability of state to act independently of both the public and international actors. related to sovereignty.
Democratic States Autonomy
Lower autonomy due to individual freedom being high. Democratic states are constrained in the degree they can act independently of the public.
State, State Apparatus and Government
States: impermanent social formations emerging from the Westphalian treaties of 1648 according to the European narrative.
State apparatus: where the power of the state resides. power is exercised through the institutions of the state. Needs to be operationalized by human agents.
Government: those agents or leadership group that occupy and exercise the power within the state apparatus.
Constitutional or Institutional Design
regime is a product of con.inst design.
identifies the arrangement of the leg, exec, jud, admin and repressive inst of state and their powers.
unitary: process where power is devolved to sub national institutions but not constitutionally. uk
federal: division of power between federal and sub national institutions constitutionally such as Canada, Germany.
Democratic Transitions
non democratic to democratic as was the case with the transition to the Wiemar Republic after the first world war
Non Democratic Transition
democratic to non democratic as was the case with the Weimar republic to the one party ideological regime type that was the third reich
How do Regime Transitions Vary
pace: rapid v.s protracted
degree: extensive v.s limited
extensive: consolidated. can withstand major crisis, public and elites devoted to new mode of governance.
limited: unconsolidated/transitional. weak, could reverse transition or transition in to something else. short duration.
Classical Liberal State Birth
The classical liberal state and democracy emerged out of the failure and contradictions of the absolutist state over centuries.
A regime transition from absolutist state forms to the classical liberal state form.
A bonafide democratic transition from absolutist to classical liberal
Core Characteristics of Democracy
- political accountability: those who govern are responsible to the state/society over which they govern and only the state/society and its citizens.
- political competition. elections although necessary are not enough for a competitive democratic political atmosphere. For example, the autocratic one party ideological regime type may hold elections but there is no realistic competition. need free, frequent and fair elections.
- political freedom: rights such as right and civil liberties. for example, these could include freedom of expression, freedom of association, freedom of the press
- political equality: universal suffrage. all adult citizens have the right to participate to any degree they see fit.
previously: regime censitaire suffrage tied to property ownership and income. and principe capacitaire suffrage tied to educational attainment which was also tied to income.
Supporting Characteristics of Democracy
- civil society: as an autonomous body to act as a way for society to learn to organize and form and express interests and promote what is important to them. constraint on arbitrary state action . private sphere autonomous of state (public sphere), limited government intervention boosts individual freedom. However, critical theorist Antonio Gramsci that nothing can be separate from state influence, and thus the public/private sphere conceptualization false.
- rule of law: everyone, including the state itself, subject to the law. constitutionalism, constraint on arbitrary state intervention.
- compliant bureaucracy. Max weber three pillars of bureaucracy. a-political, specialized and meritocratic.
- autonomous economic sphere. power resources act as a restraint on political power. fundamental to development of democracies
Factors that must be developed to become a democracy
1-4 Domestic, 5 International
- democratic political culture: attitudes, values, beliefs relative to the political regime. need a pro-democratic culture to keep the regime stable and become consolidated over time.
- civil-military relations refers to the balance of power between the military and civilians. in democratic regime types, it should asymmetrically favour politically responsible civilian leaders. In authoritarian regime types, the military can have varying degrees of influence from direct military rule where the military has a high degree of autonomy from civilian control to conjoint rule which comports to military personnel and civilians in office.
- Economic development that is pluralistic and has an ideology of equality to increase development and increase the likelihood of more even wealth distribution. deconcentration of power resources
- social homogeneity. ethno cultural similarity increases the likelihood of agreement. reconcile ethno cultural cleavage with ethno cultural compromise.
- Neighborhood, the geographic proximity to other regimes. proximity is a factor in regime transition instigation. international organizations. rules of membership incentivize democratization. Copenhagen Criteria: EU membership required an already existing capitalist economy or meaningful effort towards and an already liberal democratic regime type of meaningful efforts towards. benefits of joining EU motivate democratization.
Democracy Promotion
programs/policies that explicitly have as their goal, the promotion of democratic transitions
could be in the form of conditionalities: receive aid or other benefits on the condition of democratization.
democracy assistance: actively assist state to build democracy.
two opposing views, Democratic Peace Theory v.s Coser-Simmel Thesis
Democratic Peace Theory: Immanuel Kant, systems with more democracies are more peaceful as democracies are less likely to go to war with each other due to cooperation and democratic political culture that holds those leaders who go to war accountable.
Coser-Simmel Thesis, states go to war for domestic reasons, regardless of the identity of the target state.
Democratic Transition: Democratization v.s Liberalization
gradually embeds the core and periphery characteristics of a consolidated democratic regime.
the immediate outcome of democratization is a transitional democracy. a regime that exhibits the necessary characteristics but they have not been fully absorbed and institutionalized. a weak and vulnerable democracy.
Liberalization are the changes made to perpetuate a regime that is in crisis. An example of this are the changes made by Mikhail Gorbachev to perpetuate the soviet union. Perestroika, Glasnost. Restructuring of the economic and political openness. had the opposite effect of democratization.
Democratic Consolidation
strong democracy
characteristics embedded and supported by the public and political elites.
a democratic political culture that is mature and a democratic regime that survives in the face of crisis. Examples is the continued strength of western liberal democratic democracies in the face of the 2008 financial crisis.