In this book, a new general model of delayed transitions to
democracy is proposed and used to analyze Mexico's transition to
democracy. This model attempts to explain the slow, gradual
dynamics of change characteristic of delayed transitions to
democracy and is developed in a way that makes it generalizable to
other regional contexts. Utilizing both qualitative and
quantitative data based on an original data set of forty thousand
individual interviews, Schatz analyzes how the historical
authoritarian corporate shaping of interests and forms of political
consciousness has fractured the social base of the democratic
opposition and inhibited democratizing social action. Using
comparative cases of delayed transitions to democracy, the author's
conclusions challenge and improve upon current theories of
democratization.
In elaborating a model for the delayed transition to democracy,
the author argues that the emphasis on transformative industrialism
in both political modernization and class-analytic theories of
social bases of democratization is modeled too closely on the
western European process of democratization to allow a full
explanation of the case of Mexico's transition to democracy. In
addition, she argues that a delayed transitions model provides a
more adequate explanation of gradual transitions to democracy
because such a model builds on a the insights of structural
theories regarding the social bases of anti-authoritarian
mobilization. To support the delayed transitions model, Schatz
compares Mexico with Taiwan and Tanzania, countries also
characterized by delayed transitions to democracy in the late
twentieth century. This important book fills a considerable gap in
the literature on democratization at the end of the century.
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