How do nations make successful transitions to democracies? Our
understanding of how democracy functions--and under what
circumstances it can be consolidated and strengthened--remains
highly uneven. Recent events underscore the critical importance of
expanding our understanding of democratic institutions and
operations. Here McMahon and his distinguished contributors
demonstrate how the dynamic process of democratization is shaped by
the specific contexts in which it occurs; how the internal
community plays a key role in the development of democracy; and how
the ability to understand democratization requires both internal
and external perspectives.
The contributors seek to improve the definitions of what
constitutes a democracy and to determine how the effectiveness of
democratic institutions might best be judged in order to better
serve the analysis of and policy approaches to building democratic
institutions. With fewer overtly authoritarian states in the
post-Cold War world, a wealth of raw information and experience has
begun to accumulate. Our understanding of democratic institutional
performance requires us to look closely at the performance of the
institutions themselves. The book contains chapters on public
opinion, civil society, domestic institutions of governance,
elections, globalization, international standards of democratic
development, international assistance and academic research. A
concluding chapter summarizes what democratization processes can
teach us about democracy in a broader context.
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