Competitive Authoritarian Regimes In Which Autocrats Submit To Meaningful Multiparty Elections But Engage In Serious Democratic Abuse Proliferated In The PostCold War Era. Based On A Detailed Study Of 35 Cases In Africa Asia Latin America And Post-Communist Eurasia This Book Explores The Fate Of Competitive Authoritarian Regimes Between 1990 And 2008. It Finds That Where Social Economic And Technocratic Ties To The West Were Extensive As In Eastern Europe And The Americas The External Cost Of Abuse Led Incumbents To Cede Power Rather Than Crack Down Which Led To Democratization. Where Ties To The West Were Limited External Democratizing Pressure Was Weaker And Countries Rarely Democratized. In These Cases Regime Outcomes Hinged On The Character Of State And Ruling Party Organizations. Where Incumbents Possessed Developed And Cohesive Coercive Party Structures They Could Thwart Opposition Challenges And Competitive Authoritarian Regimes Survived; Where Incumbents Lacked Such Organizational Tools Regimes Were Unstable But Rarely Democratized.
Piracy-free
Assured Quality
Secure Transactions
Delivery Options
Please enter pincode to check delivery time.
*COD & Shipping Charges may apply on certain items.