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OverviewThe book summarises the critique of these approaches, suggests a comprehensive alternative framework, and shows how the alternative works in reality through a case study of the largest of the new democracies, Indonesia. Full Product DetailsAuthor: O. TörnquistPublisher: Palgrave Macmillan Imprint: Palgrave Macmillan Dimensions: Width: 15.20cm , Height: 1.90cm , Length: 22.90cm Weight: 5.825kg ISBN: 9781137369345ISBN 10: 1137369345 Pages: 302 Publication Date: 29 October 2013 Audience: Professional and scholarly , Professional & Vocational Format: Hardback Publisher's Status: Active Availability: In Print This item will be ordered in for you from one of our suppliers. Upon receipt, we will promptly dispatch it out to you. For in store availability, please contact us. Table of ContentsTable of Contents Preface 1. Introduction PART I: WHY ALTERNATIVE ASSESSMENTS? 2. Democracy, Democratisation and Assessments 3. The Origins of Assessments 4. Insufficient Structural Analyses 5. The Puzzling Third Wave of Democracy 6. Unintended Outcome 7. Current Positions on Democratisation 8. The Case for an Alternative 9. The Task Ahead 10. Second Thoughts 11. Structure of the Book 12. The Case of Indonesia 13. The Rise and Crisis of Early Democracy 14. Broad Agreement: Democracy Premature 15. The Old Left and Democracy 16. The Rise of a New Democracy Movement and the Overthrow of Dictatorship 17. Parachuting the Crafting of Democracy 18. The Quest for an Alternative 19. Uncertainties 20. Tracing the Dynamics of the Anti-Suharto Pro-democracy Actors 21. Mapping and Analysing the Post-Suharto Democracy Movement 22. Surveying Democracy from Below PART II: THE INSTITUTIONS OF DEMOCRACY 23. The Institutions of Democracy 24. Inclusive Assessments of Institutions 25. Points of Departure 26. Beetham's List of Institutions 27. Problems and Additions 28. The Constitution of Public Affairs and the Demos 29. Quality but also Extension, Spread and Form 30. Democratic Capacity of Governments 31. Beyond Liberal-democratic Institutions 32. Realistic Number of Intrinsic Institutions 33. The Thirteen Sets of Intrinsic Institutions 24. Indonesia's Liberal Turnabout 25. Impressive though Deteriorating Freedoms 26. Efforts to Improve Governance 27. Country-wide Political Community 28. Monopolised Representation 29. Conclusion PART III: ACTORS AND INSTITUTIONS 30. The Crucial Actors' and their Relations to the Institutions of Democracy 31. The Main Actors 32. Actors' Position on Democracy 33. Actors' Effect on Institutions 34. Institutions' Influence on Actors 35. Adaptive Indonesian Elites - and Evasive Pro-democrats 36. Politically Strong Dominant Actors and Weak Pro-democrats 37. Adaption and Evasion 38. The Relative Stability of Democracy Rests with Elitist Inclusion of People PART IV: ACTORS AND POWER 39. Actors' Political Capacity 40. Political Inclusion (versus Exclusion) 41. Authority and Legitimacy 42. Politicisation and Agenda-setting 43. Mobilisation and Organisation 44. Participation and Representation 45. The Concept of Representation 46. The Chain of Popular Sovereignty Approach 47. The Direct Democracy Approach 48. Unifying Focus on the Priniples of Democratic Representation 49. Key Questions 50. The 'where-question' 51. The 'how question' 52. Power Matters: the Case of Indonesia 53. Powerful and Hegemonic 54. Democrats on the Sidelines PART V: ACTORS AND DEMOCRATISATION 55. Actor's Strategies and Democratisation 56. Strategies and Democratisation 57. The Crucial Problems of Democratisation 58. De-politicisation of Democracy 59. Poor Popular Representation 60. Flawed Linkages in the Political System 61. The Key Problems of Fragmentation, Representation and Transformation 62. Rethinking Indonesian Pro-democrats 63. The Historical Legacies 64. Rethinking Activists 65. Society Driven Projects 66. Party-cum-candidate Driven Projects 67. Lost Opportunities in Aceh 68. The Risks: a Return to the 'politics of order' 69. Conclusion PART VI: POLICY RECOMMENDATIONS 70. From Results to Democracy Promotion 71. Research Based Recommendations 72. Cooperation with Practitioners 73. The Need for Comparative Insights 74. Upside Down Comparisons 75. The General Case of Transformative Politics 76. The Scandinavian Trail 77. Social Pact for Inclusive Growth 78. Political Conditions 79. (1) The Dynamics of Popular Organisation, State and Universal Welfare Programmes 80. (2) Unification and Interest-based Representation 81. Current Challenges and tReviewsOlle TArnquist is a distinguished scholar-activist who has been dedicated to the advance of social democracy throughout his professional life. This outstanding book records his efforts of many years, with Indonesian and other colleagues, to develop the means of understanding and so of carrying forward the process of democratisation in their countries. It deserves a wide readership amongst all those who are concerned, as scholars or as practitioners, with the deepening of democracy. - John Harriss, Professor of International Studies, Simon Fraser University, Canada Assessing the Dynamics of Democratization is one of the most unusual and most urgently needed books I have seen. Like some works, it crosses the boundaries between policy practice and academic work, speaking to both activist and scholarly audiences. It does so soberly, clearly, and with rigor. What sets it apart, however, is that it problematizes and reflects on that boundary-crossing, making explicit and questioning our assumptions along the way. Its call for strategically and knowingly engaging shallow democratic openings, rather than disparaging them from afar, is a much-needed rejoinder to current academic trends. Though rooted in a rich case study of Indonesia, this book speaks to all of us who try to connect critical, comparative, academic work with efforts at social change. This book is a bold and powerful antidote for the 'paralysis of analysis.' - Gianpaolo Baiocchi, Associate Professor of Sociology and Ethnography, New York University This innovative, informative study broadens our thinking about assessing democratization, bringing in the neglected dimension of political inclusion and its relationship to genuine democratic transformation. The author skillfully combines a strong values foundation with a rigorous analytic approach. - Thomas Carothers, Vice President for Studies, Carnegie Endowment for International Peace Assessments of howf Author InformationOlle Törnquist is Professor of Political Science and Development Research, University of Oslo, Norway. He has published extensively on politics and development, radical politics, and problems of democratisation in comparative perspective. His recent books include Politics and Development: A Critical Introduction, Popular Development and Democracy: Case Studies in the Philippines, Indonesia and Kerala, and Indonesia's Post-Soeharto Democracy Movement (with S.Adi Prasetyo & E.A.Priyono). Tab Content 6Author Website:Countries AvailableAll regions |