Chapter 6 Democratic Regimes. Copyright 2015 W.W. Norton, Inc.

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Transcription:

Chapter 6 Democratic Regimes

1. Democracy Clicker question: A state with should be defined as a nondemocracy. A.a hereditary monarch B.an official, state-sanctioned religion C.a legislative body that is not subject to elections D.None of the above; a country with any of these features might still be a democracy.

1. Democracy Origin of the term Demos, the common people Kratia, power or rule Modern definition Political power exercised either directly or indirectly through participation, competition, and liberty

1. Democracy Forms of democracy Liberal democracy Direct versus indirect democracy Republicanism Separation of powers Indirect representation

1. Democracy History of democracy Ancient Greece (Athens): a small community of direct democracy Few fixed institutions Rome: Republicanism Fixed institutions, with divided roles England: Magna Carta (1215) Limits power of monarchy and establishes rights Taxes and borrowing controlled by parliament

2. Democratization Why do some countries become democracies? And why not others? Several possible explanations Modernization Elites Civil society International relations Political culture

2. Democratization Modernization Main idea: as societies modernize economically, A middle class emerges Their population becomes wealthier, better educated, and more urbanized Old traditions of authority and hierarchy weaken New values (tolerance, gender equality) emerge The evidence: most democracies are wealthy countries The problem: there are many examples of countries that have modernized without democratizing

2. Democratization Elites Main idea: distributions of wealth and power matter When the state controls wealth, those in power are unlikely to give up control of the state Examples: elites may choose democracy if it Means they can keep their wealth (South Africa) Wins them more international support (Taiwan) Protects their assets from seizure (Chile)

2. Democratization Society Main idea: the public will be better able to push for reform if there is a strong civil society Civil society: life outside the state Examples Civil society groups pushed for the end of communism in Eastern Europe China limits environmental or religious groups, even when they are not explicitly political

2. Democratization International relations Main idea: international actors can play a direct or indirect role in promoting democracy Examples Occupation of Japan and Germany after World War II European Union (EU) pressures (including foreign investment and trade incentives) support democratization in Eastern Europe Transmission of ideas through education, media, and nongovernmental organizations (NGOs) influences the Egyptian Revolution

2. Democratization Political culture Main idea: Western-style values are key to democracy. Individualism, secularism, gender equality The evidence: historically, almost all democracies were in Western Europe or North America The problem: democracy exists outside the West

3. Democratic institutions Executive Head of state versus head of government Judiciary Rule of law Constitutional courts and judicial review Legislature Chambers (bicameral or unicameral) Power and selection Political parties

3. Democratic institutions The executive Branch of government that carries out laws and policies of the state Two distinct roles

3. Democratic institutions Examples of countries that divide the role

3. Democratic institutions Examples of countries that combine the role

3. Democratic institutions Clicker question: Who is the head of state in Canada? Hint: the person appears on Canadian coins. A. prime minister B. governor general C. British monarch D. Speaker of Parliament

3. Democratic institutions Legislature: The branch of government that makes laws Legislatures can be Unicameral Common in small, homogenous countries Bicameral Common in larger, more diverse countries Often related to federalism Houses may be elected using different rules

3. Democratic institutions Unicameral Legislatures Denmark Norway Tunisia Greece New Zealand Estonia Nebraska state legislature Bicameral Legislatures United Kingdom United States Germany Belgium Brazil India South Africa

3. Democratic institutions Variation in how representatives are chosen Direct election United States (House and Senate) France (Assembly) Germany (Bundestag) United Kingdom (Commons) Indirect election France (Senate) Germany (Bundesrat) Heredity and appointment United Kingdom (House of Lords)

3. Democratic institutions Judiciary Maintains and upholds the rule of law Rule of law: all individuals and groups, including those in government, are subject to the law irrespective of their power or authority Courts interpret applications of laws Judge criminal complaints Rule on civil suits National courts have a hierarchy The losers in a case can usually appeal to a higher court

3. Democratic institutions Judiciary: constitutional courts Possesses judicial review Abstract review Political leaders can refer questions to a court, often before laws are passed. Example: French Constitutional Council Concrete review Citizens use court cases to challenge a law after its passage. Example: U.S. Supreme Court Ninety percent of democracies have a constitutional court

3. Democratic institutions Political parties Promote Participation Competition Governance and policy making Accountability Some countries have two parties and others have more Party systems are impacted by electoral systems

4. Executive Systems Clicker question: When are governments most responsive to voters? A. B. When powers are divided between branches of government so that no one branch is powerful enough to subvert the public will When power is unified in one single branch so the public can more easily control it through elections

4. Executive Systems How do the three branches of government relate to one another? Three models Parliamentary systems Legislative and executive branches are fused Presidential systems Separation of powers between executive and legislature Semi-presidential systems A hybrid; two executives

4. Executive Systems Major comparisons Parliamentary Systems Indirect Election How is the executive chosen? Voters Parliament Presidential Systems Direct Election Government (PM and Cabinet) Parliament Voters President Fluid election cycle How frequent are elections? Vote of no confidence PM calls new election Time s up Fixed election cycle

4. Executive Systems Major comparisons Who is the primary initiator of legislation? Relations between the branches of government Parliamentary Systems Presidential Systems Prime minister and cabinet Legislature Fusion of legislature and executive Parliament and judiciary may be weaker branches Prime minister can easily be replaced between elections Separation of powers Co-equal branches Difficult to replace the executive between elections

4. Executive Systems Major comparisons Parliamentary Systems Benefits Drawbacks Presidential Systems More responsive Easier to pass legislation Easy to replace executive National mandate President is directly elected by voters Due to indirect elections, public may feel it has less control over the executive and passing of legislation Divided government may deadlock legislation Difficult to remove the president

4. Executive Systems The hybrid system Semi-Presidential Systems Direct Election How is the executive chosen? Parliament Voters Prime minister President How frequent are elections? Fixed election cycle

4. Executive Systems The hybrid system Semi-Presidential Systems Who is the primary initiator of legislation? Depends on the country Relations between Duel executive the branches of Neither fused nor separated government

4. Executive Systems The hybrid system Semi-Presidential Systems Benefits President and PM share power and responsibilities and create a public mandate (president) plus support of parliamentary coalition Drawbacks Conflict between PM and president may deadlock system Presidents can use powers to dismantle democracy

5. Elections How do voters choose their representatives? We might compare An Indonesian voter casts her ballot Do they elect candidates, parties, or both? How many people represent each constituency? District magnitude How do they calculate the winner or winners?

5. Elections Single-member district (SMD) systems Voters select candidates or parties? How many representatives for each constituency? Who wins? Plurality (First past the post) Majority (Runoff) Candidates Candidates One One The candidate with the most The candidate with a majority of votes votes May require a runoff election

5. Elections Round 1 2012 French Presidential Election Nathalie Arthaud François Bayrou Jacques Cheminade Nicolas Dupont-Aignan François Hollande Eva Joly Marine Le Pen Jean-Luc Mélenchon Philippe Poutou Nicolas Sarkozy

5. Elections Round 2 François Hollande Nicolas Sarkozy 2012 French Presidential Election

5. Elections Preferential voting Voters rank-order candidates Low-ranking candidates are eliminated Votes are redistributed to the voter s second choice Variants Alternative voting Instant runoff Single transferable vote (STV)

5. Elections Multimember district (MMD) systems Voters select candidates or parties? How many representatives for each constituency? Who wins? Proportional Representation (PR) Mixed Parties Both Many (2+) One and many Parties receive seats based on percentage (proportion) of the votes they receive Some countries use thresholds It depends Parallel voting Mixed member proportional

5. Elections PR Examples Netherlands South Africa 150 members of parliament 1 national list 400 members of parliament 2 PR Lists: All 150 members District magnitude = 150 National list members Regional list 200 9 districts 4 43 members District magnitude = 4 200

5. Elections Mixed Examples Mexico Germany 500 members of parliament Parallel voting 598+ members of parliaments Mixed member proportional system SMD list: 300 candidates 200 from 1 nationwide, PR constituency District magnitude = 1 and 200 SMD list: 299 members 299+ from 1 nationwide, PR constituency District magnitude = 1 & 299+

5. Elections Majority/Plurality Systems Proportional Representation Fewer and larger parties More and smaller parties Clear mandates Political accountability Less representative More representative Risk of fragmentation Disproportional results Advantages and Disadvantages

5. Elections FPTP rules The 2010 UK election

5. Elections The 2012 Netherlands election PR rules

5. Elections Clicker question: Which electoral system does the United States use? A. proportional representation B. first past the post C. majority voting D. preferential voting

5. Elections Clicker question: Which of the following countries uses a mixed electoral system? A. B. C. D. United States United Kingdom South Africa Mexico

6. Rights and Liberties Clicker question: Where do rights come from? A. B. Rights are natural; people have them whether or not states recognize them. Rights are created by states; they are chosen as a result of a political process, so people only have those rights that get recognized politically.

6. Rights and Liberties Civil rights: promotion of equality Civil liberties: promotion of freedom Differences across states Specificity of constitutional protections Actions by courts to defend rights and liberties Ideas about central role of state

6. Rights and Liberties Clicker question: Is universal health care a right? A. Yes B. No

7. Summary 1. Modern democracy is based on participation, competition, and liberty. It can be practiced directly or indirectly. 2. Democratization is shaped by economic, political, social, and international forces. 3. While all democracies have these institutions, they differ in how their executive, legislative, judicial, and political party systems are constructed.

7. Summary 4. Parliamentary, presidential, and semi-presidential systems offer different choices on legislativeexecutive relations. 5. There are many different ways to elect representatives. 6. Democracies vary in terms of the specific rights and liberties they include in their constitutions.