Globalization, democratization, and the Arab uprising: the international factor in MENA's failed democratization

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Abstract

What explains the almost negative impact of international factors on post-Uprising democratization prospects? This article compares the utility of rival “diffusionist” and neo-Gramscian political economy frames to explain this. Three international factors deter democratization. The failure of Western democracy promotion is rooted in the contradiction between the dominance of global finance capital and the norm of democratic equality; in the periphery, neo-liberalism is most compatible with hybrid regimes and, at best, “low intensity democracy.” In MENA, neo-liberalism generated a crony capitalism incompatible with democratization; while this also sparked the uprisings, these have failed to address class inequalities. Moreover at the normative level, MENA hosts the most credible counter-hegemonic ideologies; the brief peaking of democratic ideology in the region during the early uprisings soon declined amidst regional discourse wars. Non-democrats—coercive regime remnants and radical charismatic movements--were empowered by the competitive interference of rival powers in Uprising states. The collapse of many Uprising states amidst a struggle for power over the region left an environment uncongenial to democratization.
Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)335-357
JournalDemocratization
Volume22
Issue number2
Early online date24 Mar 2015
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 2015

Keywords

  • Globalization
  • Democracy promotion
  • Finance capital
  • Crony capitalism
  • Hegemony
  • Counter-hegemony
  • Arab Uprising

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