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Corporate Governance

Routledge Handbook of Democratization

Jeffrey Haynes - Personal Name;

Four decades ago, there were few democratically elected governments outside Western Europe and North America. Non-democracies had various kinds of authoritarian, unelected governments, including, military, one-party, no party and personalist dictatorships. From the mid-1970s, there was an unexpected, not regionally specific, shift from unelected to elected governments – a process of democratization. The US political scientist, Samuel Huntington, was quick to identify the phenomenon and decided to give it a name: the ‘third wave of democracy’. The democratization process continued in the 1980s and, after a brief hiatus, took further energy in the 1990s and early 2000s with the ‘decommunization’ of Central and Eastern Europe (CEE) in what some observers call the ‘fourth wave of democracy’ (McFaul 2002). Taken together, the third and fourth waves of democracy highlight that competitive electoral politics are now being conducted in a record number of countries, in most parts of the world. In 2011, Freedom House characterized 147 countries as ‘free’ or ‘partly free’, indicating a significant level of democracy, while 47 other states were identified as ‘not free’, suggesting a palpable lack of democracy.1 Overall, then, of the 194 countries identified by Freedom House in 2011, just over three-quarters (75.8 per cent) had extant, recognizably democratic regimes 35 years after the start of the third wave in the mid-1970s.


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Detail Information
Series Title
Routledge Handbook of Democratization
Call Number
-
Publisher
USA : Routledge., 2015
Collation
1-464
Language
English
ISBN/ISSN
978-0-203-14843-3
Classification
NONE
Content Type
-
Media Type
-
Carrier Type
-
Edition
1st Edtion
Subject(s)
Governance
Specific Detail Info
-
Statement of Responsibility
-
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No other version available

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  • Routledge Handbook of Democratization
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Accra Metropolitan University
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Accra Metropolitan University is a forward-thinking, private higher education institution in Ghana dedicated to empowering minds and shaping futures for sustainable global development. Fully accredited by the Ghana Tertiary Education Commission (GTEC), the university is built on the core pillars of LIFE: Leadership, Innovation, Flexibility, and Entrepreneurship.

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