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Fundamentals of Political Science

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Fundamentals of Political Science Dr. Sujian Guo Professor of Political Science San Francisco State Unversity Email: sguo_at_sfsu.edu http://bss.sfsu.edu/sguo – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Fundamentals of Political Science


1
Fundamentals of Political Science
  • Dr. Sujian Guo
  • Professor of Political Science
  • San Francisco State Unversity
  • Email sguo_at_sfsu.edu
  • http//bss.sfsu.edu/sguo

2
Central Questions
  • How the Third Wave democratization happened?
  • How could such similar outcomes emerge from such
    a diversity of national and regional situations?
  • What are the patterns of transition processes or
    the routes of change from country to country,
    from region to region?
  • Do these diverse routes or modes of transition
    have significance for the stability of democratic
    regimes and for the democratic consolidation?

3
Modes of Transition
categorized by leading scholars
4
Huntingtons Three Ideal-types
  • Transformation occurred when the elites in power
    took the lead in bringing about democratic
    transition.
  • Replacement occurred when opposition groups took
    the lead in bringing about democratic transition,
    and the old regime collapsed or was overthrown.
  • Transplacement occurred when democratic
    transition resulted largely from joint action by
    elites in power and opposition elites.
    (Huntington, p. 114)

5
Terry Lynn Karl and Philippe C. Schmitter
  • Four modes of transition
  • Pact occurred when elites agree upon a
    multilateral compromise among themselves to bring
    about the transition.
  • Imposition occurred when elites use force
    unilaterally and effectively to bring about a
    regime change against the resistance of
    incumbents.
  • Reform occurred when masses mobilize from below
    and impose a compromised outcome without
    resorting to violence.
  • Revolution occurred when masses rise up from
    below and defeat the previous rulers.
    (Karl/Schmitter, p. 275)

6
Major actors in regime transition
  • In the government
  • standpatters (hard-liners)
  • liberal reformers (soft-liners or moderates)
  • democratic reformers (radicals)
  • In the opposition
  • democratic moderates
  • revolutionary radicals

7
The Balance of Power
The balance of power or the relative power of
the groups shaped the nature of the transition
process and often changed during that process. If
standpatters dominated the government and
radicals in the opposition, democratic transition
was impossible. Democratic transition was
facilitated if pro-democratic groups were
dominant in both the government and opposition.
The strategic interaction between these groups is
therefore of central importance in the transition
process.
8
Major features of modes of transition(Huntington)
  • Transformation
  • Regime-led reform, regime-initiated
    liberalization, or change from above are all
    the terms to describe the central feature of this
    mode of transition. In transformations
  • the government is stronger than opposition and
    has the power and capacity to move their
    countries toward democracy
  • the relative power of reformers is stronger than
    that of standpatters in order for the
    transformation to occur and
  • those in power are willing to take the lead and
    play the decisive role in ending that regime and
    changing it into a democratic system. Spain,
    Brazil, Taiwan, USSR, Hungary, and Bulgaria are
    all the typical cases of change from above
    regime-led transformation.

9
Major features of modes of transition(Huntington)
  • Replacements
  • Opposition-led overthrow or change from below
    are often the terms to describe the central
    feature of this mode of transition. In
    replacements
  • reformers within the regime are weak or
    nonexistent while standpatters are dominant in
    government and strongly opposed to regime change
  • since the possibility of initiating reform from
    above was almost totally absent, democratic
    transition consequently resulted from the
    opposition gaining strength and the government
    losing strength until the government collapsed or
    was overthrown
  • the involvement and support from public masses is
    another necessary condition for the transition
  • the unwillingness of the military to defend the
    old regime is crucial in ending the old regime.
    Only a few cases of replacements or change from
    below are available by 1990 Portugal, Greece,
    Argentina, Philippines, Romania, and East Germany.

10
Major features of modes of transition(Huntington)
  • Transplacements
  • Pact, negotiated transition or compromise
    are often the terms to describe the central
    feature of this mode of transition. Democratic
    transition is produced by the combined actions of
    government and opposition. In transplacements
  • (1) within the government the balance of power
    between standpatters and reformers is such that
    the government is willing to negotiate a change
    of regime, but unwilling to initiate a change of
    regime usually it has to be pushed and pulled
    into formal or informal negotiations with the
    opposition.
  • (2) Within the opposition democratic moderates
    are strong enough to prevail over revolutionary
    radicals or extremists, but they are not strong
    enough to overthrow the government.
  • (3) Both government and opposition must recognize
    their incapability of unilaterally determine the
    future and see virtues in negotiation.

11
Major features of modes of transition(Huntington)
  • Transplacement (continued)
  • (4) The incumbents or the ruling elites must be
    able to see their interests protected and secured
    in the foreseeable regime change, at least not
    threatened by the change of regime, and thus
    willing to negotiate with the opposition and take
    such a strategic choice.
  • (5) The government must recognize that the costs
    of constant suppression, nontolerance, and
    nonnegotiation are too high or unbearable in
    terms of increased repression leading to further
    alienation of social groups from the government,
    intensified conflicts within the ruling coalition
    leading to self-destruction, increased
    possibility of a hard-line takeover of the
    government, and significant losses in
    international legitimacy.
  • (6) The political process leading to
    transplacement was thus often marked by a hauling
    back and forth of strikes, protests, and
    demonstrations, on the one hand, and repression,
    police violence, martial laws, on the other.
    Cycles of protests and repression eventually led
    to negotiated agreements between government and
    opposition in all cases such as Poland,
    Czechoslovakia, Mongolia, Nicaragua, Uruguay,
    Bolivia, Honduras, El Salvador, Korea, and South
    Africa.

12
Some generalizations (Karl/Schmitter, pp.
277-282, Munck/Leff, p.345)
  • Revolutions have become less frequent and less
    likely to give rise to a stable democracy. Many
    of Latin American and Asian countries are good
    examples. Revolutions may produce enduring
    patterns of domination by certain elite groups or
    social classes, without leading to democracy.
    Russia in 1917, Mexico in 1929, China in 1949,
    and Cuba in 1959 are all good examples in modern
    history.
  • No global generalization is available. Whether a
    democratic transition would take place or lead to
    a stable democracy is dependent upon many
    unmeasured variables or unexplained independent
    variables, which in turn is contingent upon the
    particular point in time and place or the
    confined contexts in which the interaction
    between elite strategic choices occurs.

13
Some generalizations (Karl/Schmitter, pp.
277-282, Munck/Leff, p.345)
  • Transplacements or transitions by pacts create
    political openings for elite competition,
    particularly generating compromise and
    settlements among political actors and crafting
    institutional rules for both old and new elites,
    and thus are the most likely to lead to a stable
    democracy or the most beneficial to democratic
    consolidation. But the success of this mode of
    transition requires time, patience, compromise,
    and skillful democratic crafting.
  • The mode of transition has a significant impact
    on the form of transitional regime and
    post-transitional politics through its influence
    on the pattern of elite conflict, on the
    institutional rules crafted during the
    transition, and on key actors willingness to
    accept or reject the new rules of the game.

14
The Impact of the mode of transition
  • Most scholars agree that the modes of transition
    matters and have great impact on the prospects of
    democratic consolidation, because mode of
    transition produces different arrangements and
    different types of democratic regimes.
  • For example, electoral laws or systems, once
    adopted, encourage some interests to enter the
    partisan politics and discourage others and will
    ultimately shape the formation of party systems,
    such as one-party system, two-party system, or
    multiparty system.
  • Certain institutional arrangements could become
    patterns or norms that become difficult to change
    later.
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