What Do We Know About Authoritarianism After Ten Years?
Review Article What Do We Know About Authoritarianism After Ten Years? David Art Jennifer Gandhi, Political Institutions under Dictatorship, New York, Cambridge Uni- versity Press, 2008. Steven Levitsky and Lucan Way, Competitive Authoritarianism: Hybrid Regimes After the Cold War, New York, Cambridge University Press, 2010. Beatriz Magaloni, Voting for Autocracy: Hegemonic Party Survival and its Demise in Mexico, New York, Cambridge University Press, 2006. Pablo Policzer, The Rise and Fall of Repression in Chile, Notre Dame, University of Notre Dame Press, 2009. Dylan Riley, The Civic Foundations of Fascism in Europe: Italy, Spain, and Romania, 1870–1945, Baltimore, Johns Hopkins University Press, 2010. Dan Slater, Ordering Power: Contentious Politics and Authoritarian Leviathans in Southeast Asia, New York, Cambridge University Press, 2010. After two decades in which democratization was pretty much the only game in town, the study of authoritarian regimes has recently become one of the hottest subfields in comparative politics. The “transitology” paradigm, which conceived of authoritarian regimes as theoretically interesting insofar as they told us something important about their democratic successors, now has the taste of ashes. Even by the standards of a faddish discipline, the magnitude of the switch in scholarly focus from democratization to authoritarianism has been remarkable. As always, real-world developments were primarily responsible for this shift. The third wave of democracy had runs its course by the turn of the twenty-first
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