Backsliding and Democratic Resilience: Prevention, Resistance, and Recovery
In this working paper, Robert Kaufman, a professor at Rutgers University, examines four crucial dimensions that may create conditions by which democracies may be insulated from, respond to, and bounce back from threats of democratic backsliding and illiberal leadership.
DownloadGlobal democracy faces escalating threats, both among long-standing and newer “third wave” democratic systems. The extent and causes of democratic backsliding have been subjects of considerable analysis and debate. However, there is still relatively limited discussion of the conditions in which democracy might be resilient to such challenges. In this working paper, Robert Kaufman, a distinguished professor of political science at Rutgers University, examines four crucial dimensions of democratic resilience: factors that help insulate democracy from backsliding; whether there are ways to respond to illiberal leaders; what factors contribute to democratic resilience if such a leader does gain power; and whether democracies can “bounce back” after authoritarians have been ousted from power.
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