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Title: Is the


1
Is the Third Wave Over?
  • Paul Bacon
  • SILS, Waseda University

2
Is the Third Wave Over?
  • When Huntington wrote his book The Third Wave
    in 1990, the wave was still near its peak.
  • Today, we look at two articles written after the
    peak of the wave.
  • Samuel Huntington After Twenty Years The Future
    of the Third Wave 1997.
  • Thomas Carothers The End of the Transition
    Paradigm 2002.

3
The Future of the Third Wave
  • Huntington considers two main questions.
  • Will democracy be consolidated in third wave
    countries?
  • Will more countries become democratic in the
    future?
  • To answer these questions, two key factors are
    important.
  • Economic development
  • Cultural receptivity

4
Economic Development and Democracy
  • Economic development has a strong positive effect
    on democratization. (Lipset)
  • The future of democracy depends on the future of
    economic development. (Huntington)

5
Why Econ. Development Helps Democracy
  1. It leads to modernization. Greater literacy,
    education and urbanization expands the
    middle-class, which attempts to defend its
    interests.
  2. Higher levels of distribution. In other words,
    the whole economic pie expands, which makes
    cooperation among people easier.

6
Why Econ. Development Helps Democracy
  • 3. It produces a more complex society, making it
    more difficult for states to assert control.
  • 4.The reduction of state control over the economy
    enhances the emergence of powerful economic
    actors which are independent of the state.

7
Why Econ. Development Helps Democracy
  • 5. In the long term, economic development
    produces greater income equality.
  • As the economy of a country develops, internal
    pressure to democratize the political system
    emerges.
  • This period of pressure is called the Transition
    Zone

8
Cultural Receptivity to Democracy
  • Democracy is a Western idea.
  • To what extent can democracy, which is a Western
    product, take root in non-Western societies?

9
Electoral and Liberal Democracy
  • There are two kinds of democracies (as suggested
    by Larry Diamond).
  • Electoral Democracies
  • hold free, fair and periodic elections but civil
    rights are not well protected.
  • Liberal Democracies
  • protect and promote a significant range of civil
    liberties in addition to free and fair elections.
  • In recent years, the number of electoral
    democracies has increased, but the number of
    liberal democracies has not.

10
Elections are Not Enough
  • Elections do not necessarily guarantee democratic
    or liberal outcomes.
  • This can happen in the following ways
  • Elections in non-Western societies can lead to
    the victory of anti-democratic groups.
  • Politicians can often win elections by making
    appeals to voters based on nationalism, ethnicity
    or religion.

11
Religion challenges to Secularism
  • Also, religiously-oriented parties have
    challenged Western secularism.
  • E.g. Turkey, India, Israel, countries in the
    former Yugoslavia, and Algeria.
  • In Muslim countries, the choice is often between
    anti-Western democracy and non-democratic
    secularism.

12
Culture and Democracy
  • It is sometimes argued that democracy is not
    compatible with non-western culture.
  • However, almost every civilization contains at
    least one liberal democracy.
  • Therefore, liberal democracy is not incompatible
    with major non-Western cultures.

13
Culture and Democracy
  • Yet, many non-western countries are still
    electoral democracies, and are not obviously
    heading towards liberal democracy.
  • Examples of this trend can be found in
  • 10 Latin American countries
  • 8 African countries
  • 5 Orthodox Christian countries
  • 5 Muslim countries.

14
Culture and Democracy
  • Some cultures have significant similarities with
    Western culture, while some cultures are very
    different.
  • Latin America
  • Africa
  • Islam
  • China

Similar to West
Different
15
Political Strategy and Democracy Promotion
  • There are two different strategies through which
    to promote democracy.
  • Promote democracy in countries which are not
    currently democratic.
  • Promote the consolidation of liberal democracy in
    existing electoral democracies.
  • Although both strategies are desirable,
    Huntington argues that the second option provides
    a greater chance of success.

16
Political Strategy and Democracy Promotion
  • Civilizations similar to the West have a greater
    chance of democratic consolidation.
  • Therefore, the first target should be Latin
    America, followed by Orthodox Christian
    countries.
  • Also, the cooperative promotion of democracy
    amongst existing democracies is important.

17
The End of the Transition Paradigm?
  • Huntington is rather optimistic about the future
    consolidation of democracy.
  • On the contrary, Thomas Carothers is much more
    pessimistic about the future of democracy.

Thomas Carothers
18
Transition Paradigm No Longer Appropriate
  • In the last quarter of the twentieth century,
    many countries moved away from authoritarian
    regime towards more liberal and democratic
    governance.

19
Transitions in Seven Regions
  • Southern Europe
  • The fall of right-wing authoritarian regimes in
    the mid-1970s.
  • Latin America
  • The replacement of military dictatorships with
    elected civilian governments in the 70s and 80s.
  • East and South Asia
  • The decline of authoritarian rule from the
    mid-1980s.
  • Eastern Europe
  • The collapse of Communism at the end of the 1980s.

20
Transitions in Seven Regions
  • The break-up of the Soviet Union
  • and the establishment of 15 post-Soviet republics
    in 1991.
  • Sub-Saharan Africa
  • The decline of one-party regimes in the first
    half of the 1990s.
  • Middle East
  • A weak but recognizable liberalizing trend in
    some countries in the 1990s.

21
Outdated Paradigm
  • Many scholars and policy-makers, especially in
    the US, recognized the three waves of democracy,
    and further argued that many third wave
    democracies were in a process of transition
    towards democracy. They regarded this trend as
    universal.
  • Carothers argues that this way of thinking is no
    longer useful. In other words, even though a
    country embraces some democratic elements, this
    does not mean it will become a consolidated
    democracy.

22
Assumptions of the Transition Paradigm
  • Carothers identifies 5 core assumptions in this
    Transition Paradigm.
  • Any country going away from democracy is
    considered to be moving towards democracy.
  • Democratization occurs in three processes.
  • Opening (crack in authoritarian regime)
  • Breakthrough (collapse of authoritarian regime)
  • Consolidation (becomes more stable and liberal)

23
Assumptions of the Transition Paradigm
  • In the transition to democracy, elections will be
    not just a foundation stone but a key generator
    over time of further democratic reforms.
  • There are no-pre-conditions for democracy. All
    that is needed is a decision by political elites
    to move towards democracy.

24
Assumptions of the Transition Paradigm
  1. Third wave democratic transitions are being built
    on functioning, coherent states.

25
The end of the transition paradigm?
  • Carothers argues that it is time to assess the
    performance of the transition paradigm.
  • Only 20 out of 100 countries identified as in
    transition are on the path to functioning
    democracy.
  • Some regressed to authoritarianism, and many are
    neither dictatorial nor heading towards democracy.

Tier One (Very successful) Poland, Hungary, Czech Republic, Estonia, Slovenia, Chile, Uruguay, Taiwan
Tier Two (Successful) Slovakia, Romania, Bulgaria, Mexico, Brazil, Ghana The Philippines, South Korea
26
The Grey Zone
  • Carothers characterizes the transitional
    countries as in a Grey Zone
  • Countries in the grey zone have some important
    elements of democracy, but also suffer from
    serious democratic deficits.

27
Qualified Democracy
  • A number of qualified democracy terms (such as
    semi- and electoral) have been coined to describe
    the countries in the grey zone .
  • The problem is that analysts are trying to apply
    the transition paradigm by describing grey zone
    countries as democracy, when they might
    actually be heading towards something other than
    democracy.

28
Types of regime in the Grey Zone
  • Feckless Pluralism
  • Frequent political alternation, causing political
    instability and postponing serious problems.
  • Most common in Latin America.
  • Dominant Power Politics
  • One group dominates politics and its replacement
    is unlikely.
  • Common in Sub-Saharan Africa, Former Soviet Union
    countries, and Middle East.

29
  • Both types of regime, feckless plural and
    dominant power political, can move to other
    categories, such as liberal democratic and
    authoritarian.

Feckless Pluralism
Liberal Democracy
Authoritarianism
Dominant Power Politics
Grey Zone
30
Carothers Opinion
  • Carothers is suggesting that the transition
    paradigm does not apply to most developing
    countries.
  • what is often thought of as an uneasy,
    precarious middle ground between full-fledged
    democracy and outright dictatorship is actually
    the most common political condition today of
    countries in the developing world and the
    post-communist world.
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