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Political and Economic Change
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I. Political Change Methods
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Revolutions A fundamental change in the political and social institutions of a society Often accompanied by violence and civil war Usually has grass roots popular support More than just a leadership change Examples – Industrial Revolution – Bolshevik Revolution – Chinese Revolution – Iranian Revolution – US in 1776?
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Reforms A significant change to the political or economic system to improve conditions Not radical, absent of revolutionary change
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Coup d'état French translation means blow (stroke) to the state Act of overthrowing the existing government, usually done by the military May or may not lead to a revolution Africa; between 1952 and 2000, 33 countries experienced 85 coups Unsuccessful attempt in Russia against Boris Yeltsin
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War Clausewitz- “Politics by other means.” Types – Interstate conflicts – Civil War – Guerrilla Warfare Examples – Nigerian Biafran Civil War – Iran-Iraq War
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Political Change: Trends and Types
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Political Liberalization Occurs when a nondemocratic system becomes more politically open and less repressive Government expands individual rights and freedoms Usually takes place with a regime change Enhances legitimacy China’s change enhances their legitimacy Soviet’s Gorbachev led to more destabilization
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Democratization Transformation process from a non-democracy to a procedural democracy to a substantive democracy May be incomplete democratization Pace varies Samuel Huntington “democratization waves” Is economic liberalization a necessary precursor?
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Stages of democratization
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1. Breakdown of nondemocracy (authoritarianism) Democratization from above – CCP in China allowed privatization Democratization from below – PRI movement in Mexico to open up politics
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2. Establishment of democracy Decision stage Elites develop new institutional framework Country adopts new constitution National referendum to adopt new framework? – Russia
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3. Consolidation of democracy Democracy very unlikely to fall apart Would require cataclysmic events to destroy US during the Great Depression and WWII democracy stayed strong
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When is democracy consolidated? Free and fair elections are routine Peaceful transition of power through elections is routine – 2 turnover rule Can survive tests of democracy – US 2000 presidential election Adherence to rule of law, peaceful Legitimacy Lengthy period of time – UK
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Democratic breakdown Democracy breaks down, creeping authoritarianism Juan Linz 3 stages: – Crisis Stage A huge event emerges, Russia & Chechnya – Breakdown stage Rules change in the system and freedoms erode, since 1992, 50 journalists have been murdered for their professional activity in Russia – Reequilibration Acceptance of new less democratic rules, par for the course
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II. Economic Change Nationalization – Government takes over existing private companies, state monopolies – Oil in Mexico and Iran
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Privatization Government owned enterprises are sold to the public Can increase corruption Russia 1990s UK & Thatcherism in the 1980’s
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Economic Liberalization Policies to move the country towards free market capitalism Removal of price restrictions Privatization of most industries Encouragement of foreign direct investment Reduce regulatory measures, trade barriers, and government spending Mexico and NAFTA
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Economic Development Statistics GDP – Gross domestic product – GNP just includes citizens GDP per capita – GDP divided by population HDI – Human development index – Infant mortality, literacy rates and other quality of life issues PPP – Purchasing Power Parity – Takes into account the real cost of living
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Gini Index Measures the level of income inequality in the countries around the world in a 0-1 scale. The lower the number, the more equality
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MDCs (EDCs)- UK LDCs- Nigeria NICs- Mexico Countries in transition, former communist states- Russia 1 st, 2 nd, 3 rd World countries
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Economic Development Strategies ISI – Import substitution industrialization – Mexico WWII to early 1980s, Latin America – State fosters industrialization, low taxes and food prices Structural Adjustment – Stresses integration into the world markets – World Bank forces on highly indebted 3 rd world countries – Privatization – Nigeria
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Modernization Theory Western model is ideal Requires education, urbanization, middle class, human capital investments by government Economic development is related cultural changes Fosters democratization China?
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Dependency Theory Developed by Latin American scholars Explains gap between MDCs & LDCs Legacy of colonialism Former colonies are underdeveloped because of the exploitation and direct control of LDCs Country stays economically poor and corrupt politically with authoritarian rule MDCs strategies: – Global trade extracts raw materials and wealth – Debt encouraged which prevents social spending – Multinational Corporations – International support of repressive regimes
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Globalization Pros Interdependence Removal of trade barriers Rapid economic growth Spread of information Spread of democracy and human rights Global Village
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Cons Erosion of state sovereignty Environmental degradation Homogenization of the world, Americanization Increased pressure of global markets Rising inequality, erosion of the middle class? Can lead to violence, civil war, state disintegration, fragmentation? Opposites?
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