The Authoritarian Surge. By Lilia Shevtsova and David J. Kramer.
The Authoritarian Surge. By Lilia Shevtsova and David J. Kramer. The American Interest, July 3, 2013.
Shevtsova and Kramer:
The
spreading contagion of protests and demonstrations across the globe
demonstrates a new phenomenon: popular dissatisfaction not only with
authoritarian regimes but also with democratic systems that are failing to
guarantee the people their rights and dignity. We saw this with the European
crisis in countries like Greece and Spain. How democratically elected leaders
seek to address these challenges will be a key test. Will they resort to
authoritarian means as Erdogan is trying to do and Rousseff tried at the
beginning? Dissatisfaction can also manifest itself elsewhere, as with the
“Occupy Wall Street” movement in the United States, or the protests in France.
All
this leaves us with two interdependent questions: What can stem the new
authoritarian tide? How should street rebellion in democratic societies be
handled? This “dual” problem could become the big challenge of the 21st
century, and responding to the first challenge will depend on how democracies
handle the second. We tend to agree with James Traub, who wrote in Foreign Policy that “the era in which
citizens will accept a return to autocracy, much less clamor for it, is drawing
to a close.” For example, Russia’s system of personalized power is showing
signs of decay.
To
staunch the authoritarian surge, the West must find ways to end its crisis—the
sooner, the better—so that it can be in a stronger position to push back
against the authoritarian challenge. Some Western countries need to think about
serious restructuring of their political systems to guarantee the rights and
dignity for all of society, not just a ruling minority. In addition, the
liberal opposition in authoritarian and semi-authoritarian societies should
consolidate their efforts and offer a viable alternative to authoritarianism.
Easier said than done, of course, but necessary nonetheless.
Presently,
we appear to be stuck in the doldrums, with little reason to be optimistic
about either the West’s capacity for reinvention or turning back the
authoritarian tide. Leadership and a strengthening of the democratic model are
crucial not only for fending off threats from protests but also for challenging
the rise of the authoritarian alternative.