Amazon cover image
Image from Amazon.com

Stateness and democracy in east Asia

Contributor(s): Material type: TextTextPublication details: Cambridge University Press New York 2020Description: xv, 275 pISBN:
  • 9781108495745
Subject(s): DDC classification:
  • 320.95 CRO
Summary: Democratization and state building are fundamental political processes, yet scholars cannot agree on which process should be prioritized in order to put countries on a positive path of institutional development. Where much of the existing literature on the state-democracy nexus focuses on quantitative cross-national data, this volume offers a theoretically grounded regional analysis built around in-depth qualitative case studies. The chapters examine cases of successful democratic consolidation (South Korea, Taiwan), defective democracy (Philippines, Indonesia, East Timor), and autocratic reversal (Cambodia, Thailand). The book's evidence challenges the dominant 'state first, democracy later' argument, demonstrating instead that stateness is neither a sufficient nor a necessary condition for democratic consolidation. The authors not only show that democratization can become trapped in path-dependent processes, but also that the system-level organization of informal networks plays a key role in shaping the outcome of democratic transitions. Provides rich comparative empirical analysis, drawing on in-depth qualitative case studies of countries across the region Allows readers to compare processes of institutional development in East Asia with other regions, such as Latin America and Africa Helps readers understand how different properties of stateness interact with elements of democracy within and across cases studies
List(s) this item appears in: Public Policy & General Management
Tags from this library: No tags from this library for this title. Log in to add tags.
Star ratings
    Average rating: 0.0 (0 votes)
Holdings
Item type Current library Collection Call number Copy number Status Date due Barcode
Book Book Indian Institute of Management LRC General Stacks Public Policy & General Management 320.95 CRO (Browse shelf(Opens below)) 1 Available 002562

Table of Contents
1. Introduction: Rethinking Stateness and Democracy in Asia Aurel Croissant and Olli Hellmann
2. State Building and Democratization: The Sequencing Debate and Evidence from East Asia Tuong Vu
3. South Korea's Democracy and the Legacies of the Developmental State Olli Hellmann
4. After Hegemony: State Capacity, the Quality of Democracy, and the Legacies of the Party-State in Democratic Taiwan Kharis Templeman
5. Democratization Interrupted: The Parallel State and the Demise of Democracy in Thailand Paul Chambers
6. Weak State and the Limits of Democratization in Cambodia, 1993–2017 Kheang Un
7. The Institutional Roots of Defective Democracy in The Philippines Erik Martinez Kuhonta and Nhu Truong
8. Stateness and State Capacity in Post-Authoritarian Indonesia: Securing Democracy's Survival, Entrenching its Low Quality Marcus Mietzner
9. As Good as it Gets? Stateness and Democracy in East Timor Aurel Croissant and Rebecca Abu Sharkh
10. Stateness and Democracy: Evidence From East Asia and Cross-Regional Comparisons Aurel Croissant and Olli Hellmann
Index.

Democratization and state building are fundamental political processes, yet scholars cannot agree on which process should be prioritized in order to put countries on a positive path of institutional development. Where much of the existing literature on the state-democracy nexus focuses on quantitative cross-national data, this volume offers a theoretically grounded regional analysis built around in-depth qualitative case studies. The chapters examine cases of successful democratic consolidation (South Korea, Taiwan), defective democracy (Philippines, Indonesia, East Timor), and autocratic reversal (Cambodia, Thailand). The book's evidence challenges the dominant 'state first, democracy later' argument, demonstrating instead that stateness is neither a sufficient nor a necessary condition for democratic consolidation. The authors not only show that democratization can become trapped in path-dependent processes, but also that the system-level organization of informal networks plays a key role in shaping the outcome of democratic transitions.

Provides rich comparative empirical analysis, drawing on in-depth qualitative case studies of countries across the region
Allows readers to compare processes of institutional development in East Asia with other regions, such as Latin America and Africa
Helps readers understand how different properties of stateness interact with elements of democracy within and across cases studies

There are no comments on this title.

to post a comment.

©2019-2020 Learning Resource Centre, Indian Institute of Management Bodhgaya

Powered by Koha