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CYCLES AND TRANSITIONS

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Title: CYCLES AND TRANSITIONS


1
CYCLES AND TRANSITIONS
2
READING
  • Smith, Democracy, Introduction chs. 1-2, 4
  • Modern Latin America, chs. 3, 5 (Mexico, Cuba)
  • Magaloni, Demise of Mexicos One-Party Regime

3
OUTLINE
  • 1. Concepts of democracy
  • 2. Electoral variations
  • 3. Transitions, To and Fro
  • 4. Case Studies Cuba and Mexico
  • 5. Caveats, Causes, and Codas

4
KEY QUESTIONS
  • What explains the spread of democracy in Latin
    America? Given authoritarian past?
  • What kind of democracy? What quality?
  • Whats new about the current phase of democratic
    change? How does it compare to prior periods?
  • What role (if any) for the United States?
  • What implications for U.S. relations with Latin
    America?

5
Concepts of Democracy
6
DEFINING PRINCIPLES
Participation, such that no substantial segment
of the population is excluded from the effective
pursuit of political power Competition, such
that there are free, fair, and regular contests
for gaining support from the populace Accountabil
ity, such that political rulers and elected
representatives serve as agents of their
constituents and must justify their actions and
decisions in order to remain in office.
7
INSTITUTIONAL GUARANTEES
  1. Freedom to form and join organizations
  2. Freedom of expression
  3. The right to vote
  4. Eligibility for public office
  5. The right of political leaders to compete for
    support and votes
  6. Alternative sources of information
  7. Free and fair elections
  8. Institutions for making government policies
    depend on elections and other expressions of
    popular preference.

8
TWO KEY DIMENSIONS
  • Elections
  • Items 3-5, 7-8
  • Rights
  • Items 1-2, 6
  • missing rule of law
  • Question What if they dont go together? What
    about the prospect of illiberal democracy?

9
Electoral Variations
10
CATEGORIES OF ELECTORAL REGIMES
Electoral democracy free and fair
elections Semidemocracy elections free but not
fair or, effective power not vested in winner
of elections Competitive oligarchy elections
fair but not free candidates restricted to
socio-economic elite and suffrage restricted to
minority of population Autocracy/authoritarianis
m no elections, or elections neither free nor
fair.
11
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12
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13
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14
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15
Transitions, To and Fro
16
  • DETERMINANTS OF DEMOCRATIC
  • TRANSITIONS DOMESTIC FACTORS
  • 1. Economic Development
  • Social Forces/Class Coalitions
  • Authoritarian Failures
  • Elite Splits, Exclusions, and Negotiations of
    Compacts with Opposition
  • Unsolvable Problems and the Search for Exits

17
DETERMINANTS OF DEMOCRATIC TRANSITIONS
INTERNATIONAL FACTORS 1. Imperialism and
Democracy 2. Anti-Communist Crusades 3.
Optimism and Uncertainty The 1990s 4. Now
9/11 and Its Aftermath
18
Types of Authoritarian Regime ________________
Power Structure___________________
Personalist Institutionalized Leadership ______
______ Traditional Caudillo
or Collective Junta or Military Man on
Horseback Bureaucratic-Authoritarian Regim
e Technocratic State, One-Party State
or Civilian Delegative Semi-Democracy, Corporatis
t Regime or Sultanistic Despotism
19
FORMS OF TRANSITION
  • Personalist regimes, especially sultanistic
    despotism armed revolution
  • Personalist regimes if military armed
    revolution or military replacement
  • Bureaucratic regimes fissures within ruling
    elite, negotiation with opposition
  • One-party regimes winning elections

20
CASE STUDIES CUBA AND MEXICO
  • Cuba (1959) armed revolution (against weak
    state, corrupt regime, incompetent military,
    withdrawal of U.S. support)
  • Mexico (1910) disputed election armed
    revolution incomplete replacement of leadership
  • Mexico (2000) victory at polls

21
DEMISE OF THE PRI
  • Decline from hegemony to dominance
  • Splits within elite (1980s)
  • Economic problems and policies (NAFTA)
  • Deterioration of party base, strengthening of
    opposition ( Zapatista uprising)
  • Institutional reforms
  • 1990-93 piecemeal change
  • 1994-96 independent IFE

22
PRI PREFERENCES PAYOFFS
  • Preferences
  • The PRI prefers winning to losing and having a
    submissive electoral institute to an independent
    IFE and prefers the Opposition to accept the
    election results rather than contest them because
    this entails legitimacy costs.
  • Payoffs
  • Winning 10
  • Creating IFE - 2
  • Fraud - 2
  • Challenge - 4

23
OPPOSITION PREFER PAYOFFS
  • Preferences
  • The Opposition prefers winning to losing it
    prefers an independent IFE and it makes its
    decision to accept or contest contingent on the
    PRIs choice to create an independent IFE or
    not.
  • Payoffs
  • Winning 10
  • Independent IFE 2
  • Losing/fraud - 4
  • Contesting/Strong IFE - 2
  • Contesting/Submissive IFE 2

24
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25
Caveats, Causes, and Codas
26
Caveat No. 1
  • On the importance of defining terms
  • Electoral democracy (Smith others)
  • Liberal democracy (Smith others) Robert Dahl
    democracy
  • Illiberal democracy (Smith Zakaria)
  • Nondemocracy (Smith) Authoritarianism

27
Caveat No. 2
  • On choice of terms
  • Wave vs. cycle
  • Implicit causal mechanisms
  • On Latin America in world context
  • Understanding pre-1950s
  • Singular profile among developing areas
  • Roles of ideology/culture

28
Caveat No. 3
  • A weak state is a weak democracy
  • Taming of democracy vs. incompetent governance
  • Democracy by permission
  • And then the rise of the new left

29
Caveat No. 4
Outcomes of Political Transitions, 1900-2000
1900-1939 1940-1977 1978-2000 1900-2000
___ ___ _______ ___ ___ _______
Outcome____ Autocracy 45 47
17 39 Oligarchy 36
6 -- 15
Semidemocracy 11 20
40 22 Democracy 9
27 43 24 N transitions
56 64 35 155
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