Monday, April 09, 2007

Is "Democracy" Enough?

From a November 1997 article, "The Rise of Illiberal Democracy" by Fareed Zakaria
"Today, in the face of a spreading virus of illiberalism, the most useful role that the international community, and most importantly the United States, can play is -- instead of searching for new lands to democratize and new places to hold elections -- to consolidate democracy where it has taken root and to encourage the gradual development of constitutional liberalism across the globe. Democracy without constitutional liberalism is not simply inadequate, but dangerous, bringing with it the erosion of liberty, the abuse of power, ethnic divisions, and even war. Eighty years ago, Woodrow Wilson took America into the twentieth century with a challenge, to make the world safe for democracy. As we approach the next century, our task is to make democracy safe for the world.

Elections require that politicians compete for peoples' votes. In societies without strong traditions of multiethnic groups or assimilation, it is easiest to organize support along racial, ethnic, or religious lines. Once an ethnic group is in power, it tends to exclude other ethnic groups. Compromise seems impossible; one can bargain on material issues like housing, hospitals, and handouts, but how does one split the difference on a national religion? Political competition that is so divisive can rapidly degenerate into violence. A distinguished expert on ethnic conflict, Donald Horowitz, concluded, "In the face of this rather dismal account . . . of the concrete failures of democracy in divided societies . . . one is tempted to throw up one's hands. What is the point of holding elections if all they do in the end is to substitute a Bemba-dominated regime for a Nyanja regime in Zambia, the two equally narrow, or a southern regime for a northern one in Benin, neither incorporating the other half of the state?"

2 comments:

GUY said...

I really enjoyed this post J. The author's opinions are very similar to my own in many respects. Looking forward to picking this one up at Borders. Thanks for the tip.

P.S.
Your vocabulary is genuinely impressing the shit out of little old law school me.

Anonymous said...

I think we should follow Marx's advice: don't export the abstract-side (liberal-democracy), but the concrete-side (capital-economy). Don't try and establish democracy in a racially/culturally-divided world, but put race and culture underneath the totalizing power of Capital, which dissolves all 'natural' affiliations.

What society is Zakaria thinking of that has multiethnic groups and assimilations? Only Capitalist institutions have provided this, either in their totalitarian-form as the USSR and its Communist blocs, which denied race and gender as factors of distinction, and strong Western-free-market countries where the attempts to hire women and children and 'other' races allowed for a fuller 'freedom' for economic-individuals, as all had to be the same under the 'law' in order to be used as workers.

Rather than follow Wilson and Wolfowitz, let's follow some good Marxist's like Milton Friedman or Ayn Rand: generate market-conditions that make the individual truly groundless, without culture, race, gender or self-identity save from their money, and then you'll have 'free' individuals.

At which point, once we've dissolved their racial-cultural affiliations, we can actually get to work on politics...

But, hey, I'm a modernist...