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Chapter 8 Comparative Politics

Chapter Objectives

1. Outline the comparative method.

2. Explore the meaning of the state and its key characteristics.

3. Define democracy, and identify ways in which it is measured.

4. Discuss patterns in postcommunist transitions and state development.

5. Define nationalism, and identify how it can often lead to conflict.

Today’s China is an interesting amalgam of communist ideology and capitalist practice. In 1949, Mao Zedong established the People’s Republic of China with himself as the ruler. Mao’s influence on China can hardly be overstated; under his dictatorial leadership, China underwent significant social, cultural, and economic change. Mao’s “Little Red Book” of communist thought and ideology was, and still is, required reading throughout China. His modernization programs quickly industrialized the country, but the Cultural Revolution decimated professional classes and easily set China back. Following his death, the Communist Party of China instituted a term limit for presidents at two five-year terms in order to limit the type of power Mao had acquired. While Chinese presidents remain quite powerful, perhaps even authoritarian, politicians since Mao have abided by these rules.

However, in March 2018, China’s National People’s Congress agreed to abolish term limits on China’s president, which had been in place since Mao Zedong in order to allow its current president, Xi Jinping, to hold power for many years to come. In addition to his position as president, Xi also holds the positions of general secretary of the Chinese Communist Party’s Central Committee and chairman of the Central Military Commission. While many in the West had hoped that economic reforms in China, allowing for some capitalist practices, would eventually lead the country to a democratic future, Xi’s consolidation of power for the foreseeable time means that nothing like democratic principles appear to be at work. The challenge, then, for political scientists, is to understand the complex politics of a country as large and as complicated as China. With its long historical traditions and blending of communism and capitalism, it is a country that the West often misunderstands.

Comparative politics is the study of countries and politics around the world; comparativists examine the same thing political scientists do in American politics but do it in an international manner. They study institutions, political parties, public opinion, and voting all around the world. Some will compare patterns in one country to patterns in another or study the politics of an entire region. The name comparative politics also applies to another aspect of study: the methodology used. In comparing and contrasting countries, comparativists seek to understand why politics is different or the same around the world.

There are many ways of looking at politics around the world. We can look at different political institutions, the executives, legislatures, and court systems around the world. We can examine countries that are liberal democracies and those that are authoritarian. We can look at democracies versus monarchies versus oligarchies. We can look at health policy around the world or education policy or foreign policy. We can even look at the development of countries, from industrialized countries to developing countries, to the least developed.

So how to break up this chapter? If you were taking an introductory course to comparative politics, your professor may choose one of two main ways to organize the class: around regions and countries or around topic. In the country approach, you may study three or four countries in each of the following categories: industrialized democracies (think Europe here); communist and postcommunist countries such as Russia and China; and developing states such as those in Latin America, Africa, or the Middle East. Because patterns of politics are generally similar in countries in the same region or stage of development, by learning about the politics of some of these states, you can better understand the larger region. In the second approach, you may learn about major concepts such as the state, democracy, regime change, policy, and economics. This way, you learn not only about major concepts in comparative politics but can learn how to apply them across different countries. Either of these approaches is a valid and constructive way of learning about comparative politics.

For our purposes here, we’ll be using the second approach to exploring comparative politics. We certainly will not be able to address every major topic of study in comparative politics, nor will the ones addressed be considered by everyone to be the most important. However, major topics like states, including their structure, development, economy, and democracy, are some of the most important concepts you’ll come across in comparative politics. But first, we’ll need to address the methodological component of comparative politics, the comparative method.

The Comparative Method

In 1971, Lijphart wrote, “Among the several fields or subdisciplines into which the discipline of political science is usually divided, comparative politics is the only one that carries a methodological instead of a substantive label. The term, ‘comparative politics’ indicates the how but does not specify the what of the analysis.”1 Lijphart identifies the comparative method as one of the basic scientific methods that allows scientists to test out propositions and hypotheses; it is “a method of discovering empirical relationships among variables.”2

One immediate thing about this process to be noted is that there are many outside variables that could affect the main relationship; Lijphart calls this the problem of many variables, small number of cases. Given the large number of characteristics that could affect any hypothesis, it will not always be possible to find enough cases, enough countries, or enough governments to properly test the hypothesis, and even then, you may not be able to get enough cases with similar enough characteristics. And further, just because a relationship may be apparent in a test of five countries, who is to say that that relationship will hold for other regions, countries, or periods of time?

One other major problem can also be confronted when using the comparative method. Because scientists are picking the cases to study and test their hypotheses with, we sometimes see something called selection bias, or selecting on the dependent variable. This means that scientists pick the cases to study so as to ensure that their theory is not disproved. In a more technical way, Collier and Mahoney define selection bias as selecting extreme cases that could lead to biased “estimates of causal effects.”3 To be sure, scientists may not be doing this on purpose, they may not even realize that they are biasing their own results. This just means that comparativists must pay very close attention to how they choose the cases they study to ensure that selection bias does not happen.

That being said, the comparative method, when used properly, can offer political scientists the ability to understand patterns of politics around the world—particularly for countries that are similar in region, similar in history, or similar in government. This allows every state and every government in the world to come up for examination, including America. Therefore, when one studies political science in Europe, they do not recognize a difference between comparative and American politics; for everyone else, they comprise the same thing. The comparative method can be used in any study of politics, even in America.

The State

Here in America, when we say state, we’re usually referring to one of the fifty United States. While this is a legitimate use, the term state also refers to governments and countries around the world. In fact, when we refer to places like the United Kingdom, South Africa, China, or Chile, the proper term to use is state. Theorists going as far back as the Enlightenment and Thomas Hobbes have struggled with the meaning of the state—what it is, what defines it, what differentiates it from society or government. Social contract theorists like Hobbes and Locke theorized that the state arises from the social contract entered into by citizens. Steinberger argues that under Hobbes’s social contract, not only is a sovereign created in which all powers are bestowed but a commonwealth that allows the sovereign to exist and act.4

Idea of the State

Early political scientists also homed in on the idea of a state, attempting to define what exactly constituted a “good” state. Weber, the same prolific German sociologist so influential in early conceptions of bureaucracy and public administration, defined the state as an entity that has a monopoly on the legitimate use of force. Force does not include only physical, military, or police, but legal coercion. For example, the state can coerce us to pay taxes or drive the speed limit by threatening us with 

State Formation

Aside from identifying what the state is or is not, political scientists also try to understand what causes states to form and why. The origins of the modern state system date back to the times of Hobbes himself with the signing of the Treaty of Westphalia in 1648. The treaty ended the Thirty Years’ War in Europe and established principles of territorial sovereignty with competing states held in check by a balance of power. The Westphalian system led to a decline in traditional political authority like monarchies and feudalism, an increase in sovereignty over carefully defined land masses, and an increase in the complexity of governmental institutions.10

Vu takes the ideas of the state and state formation one step further, arguing that the way in which states form can tell us something about the meaning of the state itself.11 For many European states, war and the subsequent need for rulers to acquire resources to fight wars helped lead to state formation. A homogenous civil society with competing groups also seems to be a prerequisite. These characteristics can tell us a lot about when states do or not form, which is important because the largest growth in the number of states did not occur in the early period of state formation but much later. In fact, Germany as a state did not emerge until the late 1800s! Many states in Latin America and Africa did not emerge until late because they had been colonial outposts of European nations. Even then, it was not always easy for states to form; colonial powers had no interest in seeing countries develop economically and therefore compete with their mother countries. Other former colonies had, and still have, severe ethnic conflicts because colonial masters drew lines with no thought toward historical and natural conflicts. Conflicts in the Middle East and Africa demonstrate how these two problems have intertwined to either lead to late state development or the lack of development altogether.

State Strength

This last issue leads us to concerns about the strength of states. How strong or weak states are can be used to explain why state formation does or does not occur, why revolutions do or don’t happen, and how countries respond to crisis. For example, prior to the US invasion of Iraq in 2003, the state of Iraq under Saddam Hussein could be considered to be strong. Saddam was able to forcibly keep his country together despite the fact that three different ethnic groups all had reason to pull apart. And pull apart they did once Saddam’s regime fell; the result has been a weak Iraqi state that has been penetrated by outside forces such as the Islamic State. It isn’t easy for scholars to agree on what constitutes a strong state and what constitutes a weak state. Some have identified state strength as the ability of states to control political outcomes. Davidheiser identifies three criteria for a strong state: how deeply the state penetrates into society, the breadth of that penetration, and state autonomy.12 Correspondingly, fragile states are those that “lack the capacity to discharge their normal functions and drive forward development.”13

Fragile states can very often lead to failed states. Failed states exist where there is no entity that can exert sovereignty over their territory; this can lead to dangerous situations where no rule of law exists and chaos can reign. A prominent example of a failed state is Somalia, which has given safe harbor to modern-day pirates precisely because there is no legitimate authority or law in place to stop them. Piazza has come to this very conclusion; in studying 197 countries between 1973 and 2003, he finds that failed states are more likely to be home to transnational terrorist groups, giving safe haven to groups that are likely to strike outside of their home territory.14 On the other hand, Patrick questions this link, arguing that state failure is only imperfectly related to transnational security threats. In any case, failed states have come in for as much examination as states that do exert control over their territory.15

Democracy

In America, we often take the term democracy for granted. We’re taught that America represents the pinnacle of democracy without seriously thinking about what that means. For political scientists who study democracy around the world, the meaning of democracy is a very important thing, especially if we want to know what promotes democracy and what prevents it from taking hold.

Defining Democracy

Theories of democracy go back to ancient Greece, where we are told democracy means rule by the people. But what does rule by the people mean? Does it mean all people or just some people? Does it have to be all the time or just some of the time? And what if the majority of people act to take away important rights or rules? Does the fact that the majority says something is acceptable make it democratic? If we simply think about the history of American democracy, there were large periods in history where African Americans and women were not allowed to participate and had limited rights; does that mean America wasn’t a democracy? These are just some of the basic concerns of democratic theorists in trying to understand precisely what democracy is.

In the mid-twentieth century, various definitions of democracy were put forward. Lipset defined democracy as follows:

[It is] a political system which supplies regular constitutional opportunities for changing the governing officials. It is a social mechanism for the resolution of the problem of societal decision-making among conflicting interest groups which permits the largest possible part of the population to influence these decisions through their ability to choose among alternative contenders for political office.16

Lipset’s definition focuses mainly on the requirement of elections, but how often do those elections need to occur? And do they need to be fair? Dahl adds to this definition by requiring that a democracy have elections that are fair, or rather, that everyone’s vote count equally.17 Downs goes one step further by saying that democratic elections should be held periodically.18 Combining these early definitions of democracy, comparativists came to the maxim that democracies are countries that have free, fair, and frequent elections.

But what about civil liberties—things that protect citizens’ rights or the structure of government itself? Bollen argues that democracy is better defined as “the extent to which the political power of the elite is minimized and that of the nonelite is maximized.”19 His definition encompasses many of the structures that would allow this to happen: elections and civil liberties, protections for citizens from government. Similarly, Muller defines democratic states as follows:

(1) The executive must be elected or be responsible to an elected assembly, in (2) at least two consecutive and free and fair competitive elections in which (3) at least approximately a majority of the population has the right to vote, and during which (4) the rights of freedom of speech and assembly are respected.20

Measuring Democracy

Knowing the definition of democracy is only half the battle; how do we measure how democratic a country is? There are a number of indices, or ways, of measuring democracy that have been put together in studies of comparative politics. Some measures are simply dichotomies; either a country is democratic or is not. In their study of measures of democracy, Bollen and Paxton divide measures of democracy into two traditions: one where measurements utilize voter turnout statistics, composition of legislatures, or availability of the vote, and a second that utilizes subjective determinations by a group of experts who rate how democratic a country is.21

One example of the later approach is the Freedom House ratings, which are released every year and widely used in comparative politics. Figure 8.1 shows how the percentage of countries rated as free, partly free, and not free have changed since 1985, according to Freedom House. Another set of measurements is the Polity data set, which scores states on a scale of −10 (hereditary monarchy) to +10 (democracy) (see Figure 8.2). The rankings depend on specific variables: freedom of group opposition, competitiveness of the political nomination process, election of chief executive, and effectiveness of the legislature.

Figure 8.1 Freedom House Rankings through the YearsAfter years of major gains, the share of free countries has declined over the past decade, while the share of not-free countries has risen.

So what contributes to countries becoming democratic? In a comprehensive study of civic attitudes and democracy, Muller and Seligson find that the only attitude that positively contributes to democracy is a belief in gradual rather than sudden, revolutionary reform.22 Ross, in “Does Taxation Lead to Representation?” (which ironically appeared in the British Journal of Political Science), tests the idea of whether the need to raise taxes forces countries to democratize and finds support for this thesis.23 In studying Latin America, a region where patterns of democratization have been uneven, Perez-Linan and Mainwaring demonstrate the influence of history on democratization; in states with a stronger history, a stronger experience with democracy, democratization is more likely to proceed.24 All of these studies suggest that ideas in civil society and beliefs about what the government should or should not do contribute to the building of democracy. If we draw this line of inquiry out, democracy, then, can be very sensitive to place, time, and culture.

Culture is a concept that plays a role in a lot of comparative research. Some of the earliest research examining the relationship of culture to democracy was published by Almond and Verba in 1963 in a book called The Civic Culture. In examining the United States, Germany, Mexico, Italy, and the United Kingdom, Almond and Verba argue that what they call the civic culture supports a strong and vibrant democracy. Later generations of political scientists and comparativists have continued this tradition of research. Examining twenty local governments throughout Italy, Putnam identifies distinct historical legacies throughout Italy, which he argues have contributed to the strength of democracy throughout the country.25 Putnam adapted Almond and Verba’s concept of civic culture and focused on something called social capital. For Putnam, social capital represents the connections we have with one another that contribute to our resources for and abilities to contribute to a democratic life. Taken together, these two studies represent some of the major works linking culture to democracy.

Being able to measure how democratic a country is allows comparativists to study not only how democracies come about but what the effects of democracy are. Baum and Lake find that democracies lead to increased life expectancy in poor countries and increased education levels in richer countries.26 Li and Reuveny show that increased levels of democracy lead to decreased levels of environmental degradation.27 Boehmke finds an increased presence in interest group and associated activity as democracy increases.28 What else do you think democracy affects?

Globalization

A not-so-old saying says that when America sneezes, the rest of the world gets a cold. The saying refers to the connections of the global economy; if the American economy experiences a hiccup, the effects of that hiccup quickly reverberate around the world. Growing up today, it’s easy to notice the increased economic and other connections between states around the world; we call this globalization. In fact, globalization is often associated in many ways with democracy, political economy, and even culture. Without a doubt, the connection between economics, democracy, and globalization are often subtle and diverse. Does more democracy lead to globalization, or does globalization lead to democracy? How does the economy play a role in mediating these linkages?

Globalization as a process can be traced throughout history; for example, trade caravans in the Middle East, the Silk Road to China, and European colonialization beginning in the 1500s all represent globalization. While the first real coordinated efforts at setting the foundations for an international economy began at the Bretton Woods Conference after World War II, political science research into globalization did not begin in earnest until the 1980s. Kapstein describes the natural conflict inherent in the process of globalization: “how to benefit from increased economic intercourse while pursuing legitimate national objectives, such as bank safety and soundness.”29 Countries want to take advantage of increased opportunities for trade and commerce, but if one country sneezes, others need to avoid a cold.

Economic globalization means that individual state economies are increasingly knit together, something exemplified in international trade agreements like the North American Free Trade Agreement (NAFTA) (recently renegotiated and pending ratification) and the Trans-Pacific Partnership (TPP). American critics of these sorts of trade agreements argue that by eliminating or reducing barriers to trade, companies will outsource their manufacturing to other countries where wages and costs are lower, thereby reducing employment opportunities and wages for American workers. However, Scruggs and Lange find that as far as union membership is concerned, increased economic globalization produces no effect.30 While this may be the case for developed countries, Ha shows that among developing countries, globalization is associated with increased income inequality.31

Globalization does not just occur with economics but with politics; political globalization is the increasing connectedness of political institutions, particularly international organizations like the United Nations, the European Union, the International Monetary Fund (IMF), and other nongovernmental organizations. Think about the European Union in particular; the European Union is a confederation in which member states have given up some of their state sovereignty to the central political framework, especially in economics. This brings countries as different as France, the United Kingdom, Greece, and Germany together in a political and economic relationship where the actions of one affect the actions of all others.

One of the areas in which political science research has proven fruitful has been in tracing the consequences of globalization. Li and Reuveny, for instance, show that while economic changes can contribute to the spread of democracy, the more powerful factor is the spread of democratic ideas.32 One easy way to see this finding in action is the history of the Arab Spring movement in 2011. One of the things that allowed the Arab Spring to spread across the Middle East was access to the Internet, which helped not only to organize the protestors but to familiarize them with democratic ideals. Although the effects of the Arab Spring are rather questionable, it still demonstrates the power of ideas and increased global connectedness.

Globalization also has social impacts. Gray, Kittilson, and Sandholtz as well as Richards and Gelleny find that increased globalization generally leads to the betterment of the status of women.33 For women, globalization often means employment and educational opportunities. An example of this is in the field of microlending, where organizations lend women in developing countries small amounts of money to develop a business, which leads to increased income for the women and their families. Mukherjee and Krieckhaus show that globalization positively affects human well-being; both child and infant mortality fall, and life expectancy rises as globalization increases.34

Communism and Postcommunism

Perhaps no other topic in comparative politics has been as researched and discussed as the phenomenon of communism. The Cold War, driven by the ideological conflict between communism and democracy, was a political battle of wills between the two great superpowers of the twentieth century. As such, it was a natural topic of research for political scientists. This brief examination will be by no means a complete record or analysis of research into communism but will briefly discuss some of the more pertinent aspects of what communism is as a concept; how political scientists have studied it; and how countries, most prominently Russia, have transitioned from communism.

Communism in Practice

The first thing to understand about communism is that the brand of communism actually practiced by the Soviet Union, China, and their subsidiaries is not the theoretical construct of communism initially envisioned by Marx and Engels in The Communist Manifesto. Recall from Chapter 3 that Marx and Engels looked at history and saw in it a history of class struggles. The owners of the means of production, the bourgeoisie, sought to have control over the working class, the proletariat. They theorized that once a society had become industrialized and education had spread so that the proletariat came to realize how they were being used, a final revolution would occur. The proletariat would overthrow the bourgeoisie and eliminate any form of the state or government; the resulting society would be one in which all people were considered equal and shared ownership of both the means and results of production.

It’s obvious why such an ideology would be attractive to those outside of the bourgeoisie. Particularly in countries where poverty and inequality were rampant, communism was easily able to gain a foothold. However, those same countries, Russia and later China, were not the theoretical hotbeds of communism that Marx and Engels envisioned. Neither were industrialized (both were incredibly agrarian in their economy), and neither country had an educated working class that had come to realize and support the communist doctrine. Instead, both countries saw revolutionary leaders emerge that took the seed of communist ideology and infused it with local flavor and characteristics that made the communism that came to be practiced unique in each country.

In Russia, the conflict between communist forces and czarist loyalists came during World War I. The Bolshevik revolution, first headed by Leon Trotsky, was soon to be taken over by Vladimir Lenin, who formed the intellectual heart of Soviet communism. Lenin, realizing that the requirements for a true communist revolution were not yet in place in Russia, modified the theory of Marx and Engels and believed that before a communist revolution could occur, there must first be a dictatorship of the proletariat to prepare the state for the coming communist movement. The leadership would ensure that conditions like industrialized and class consciousness improved such that communism could eventually be fulfilled as Marx and Engels wrote. Lenin would become the first leader of the Soviet Union to be followed by the murderous dictator Joseph Stalin. As we know today, the dictatorship of the proletariat never succeeded in preparing the way for communism; the Soviet Union disintegrated in 1991.

Much of the ideological concern and conflict would not come to a head until after World War II. Indeed, for the entirety of the war, the Allies included not only France, the United Kingdom, and the United States but also the Soviet Union. But in the absence of a common foe and the introduction of the atom bomb, the burgeoning conflict between the United States, democracy, and capitalism on one side and the Soviet Union and communism on the other blossomed into the Cold War. At that time, the forces of communism seemed stronger than ever and getting stronger by the day. Not only had the Soviet Union matched the United States in terms of the atom bomb by 1949 but more countries were succumbing to communism either by force or by choice. Many Eastern European countries that fell under the Soviet Union’s purview following World War II had communist governments pushed on them from the ultimate dictator of the proletariat. And perhaps most significantly, China adopted communism in 1949.

China’s road to communism, while sharing some similarities with Russia’s, led to its own distinct form of communism. Like precommunist Russia, China was largely agrarian with little industrialization and little in the way of widespread education. What China did have, however, was a strong streak of nationalism that led to increased resentment as foreign powers came into China in the beginning of the twentieth century. This led to a Chinese civil war following World War II, which ended with communists, led by Mao Zedong, defeating the Nationalists led by Chiang Kai-shek.

As Lenin did for the Soviet Union, Mao did for China in adopting Marxist thought to local conditions. This eventually led to a sharp split between the Soviet Union and China. Mao acknowledged that the vast majority of Chinese citizens were, in fact, peasants, and therefore that Marxist ideology would need to be adjusted to fit the circumstances in China.35 Writing in 1951 on the nature of Chinese communism, Littlejohn says this:

The ultimate oracle is at present in Moscow, whence come the highest directives, but the application of all ruling is, in my opinion, a matter of local usage. In fact I have a strong suspicion that the Chinese will before long consider their Communism to be superior to the Russian brand.36

Studies of Communism

Most of the political science literature on communism prior to 1960 focused on communism’s relation not only to individual states like Russia and China but religion and how it manifested in democratic countries like Australia. Scholar of Islam Lewis analyzed how compatible Islam would be with communism, notwithstanding Marxist communism’s prohibition on religion.37 Priestley argued that China’s assault on Christian churches had not so much to do with religion as it had to do with overcoming potential obstacles to consolidation of the regime.38 Also in regard to religion, Waddams explores the relationship between churches in Eastern Europe and the Russian Orthodox Church and the Moscow government, particularly in light of the Orthodox Church’s ability to avoid complete disintegration.39

Regional- and country-specific studies of communism continued into the Cold War. Recognition that communism was not as monolithic as it wanted to appear became commonplace. The United States was able to exploit this shift through an opening of relations with China in the early 1970s. Recognizing these distinct differences in brands of communism, Tucker, in 1967, called for a more comparative approach to studying communism that would allow analysts to more thoroughly understand the similarities and differences in communism around the world.

By the 1980s, changes in the communist world began to take their toll. With the opening of US-Chinese relations, China was rapidly industrializing, and their economy began to become the Goliath it is today. In the Soviet Union, partly under the influence of President Ronald Reagan, political and economic reforms were instituted. Under the leadership of Mikhail Gorbachev, the twin policies of glasnost and perestroika were introduced. Glasnost led to political reforms centered around more transparency and openness while perestroika represented economic reforms allowing for greater private ownership. Then, in 1989, many of the Eastern European satellite communist states finally rebelled against their political masters, tore down (both literally and figuratively) the wall separating Eastern and Western Europe and transitioned to democracy. By 1991, the Soviet Union itself was incapable of surviving and collapsed.

One of the great failures of political scientists was their inability to predict in advance the imminent fall of communism. Therefore, in the years following the end of Soviet communism, much of the research about communism focused on why it all of a sudden failed. Schopflin identifies economic problems, a lack of government legitimacy, and shifts in public opinion as key drivers of the Eastern European transition.40 Di Palma adds to this the existence of a civil society in Eastern European countries that survived the communist takeover.41 Janos reexamines communist theory and the historical record to try to reconstruct patterns of political change in the communist world.42

Postcommunist Transitions

Other political scientists focused not only on the effects of the end of Soviet communism but on examining the transition from communism. Schopflin sees possible problems for the formerly communist Eastern European states stemming from their intolerance of economic inequalities that would naturally occur in capitalist societies, as well as a hostility toward a middle class.43 White and McAllister looked at membership in the Communist Party in Russia and found that while it still held some sway as being the largest of the political parties to emerge after the fall of communism, younger and more religious Russians had left the party, leaving its future very much in doubt.44 Finally, Mishler and Rose find that skepticism abounds in postcommunist countries about government, which could make consolidation of democracy more difficult to achieve.45

Communism continues to be an intriguing topic for political scientists because it has left marks on societies that will exist for decades to come. Many comparativists continue to investigate these legacies and the continuing changes in communist countries that still exist today such as China. At the base level of politics, the antagonism that existed between the former Soviet Union and the United States continues to play out on other levels today as both countries compete for influence around the world and, in particular, in the Middle East. Although the Cold War may be over, the possibility for research is not.

Authoritarianism

While communism was merely the theory behind the operations of governments in states like the Soviet Union, it is critical to remember that ideology and government type are distinct concepts. For many of the major communist states of the twentieth century, and for some noncommunist states, the style of government adopted was that of authoritarianism or totalitarianism. Totalitarianism and authoritarianism are related in the sense that both are forms of government where the governing authorities have almost total and complete power. However, totalitarianism is a type of government in which the authorities have total and complete control over their society, whereas authoritarian government, while still exerting almost complete control, allows for some political freedoms although there are no political protections or democratic procedures in place.46 A good example of the difference between these two types of government is China. Under Mao in the twentieth century, China was considered a totalitarian government with Mao, as dictator, exerting near total control over the country. However, over time, China has allowed its citizens some limited political power although the state still controls the process. As such, today, China is considered an authoritarian state.

Concerns about authoritarianism naturally arise because of its lack of democratic principles and procedures but scholarly consideration of it increased greatly after World War II and the totalitarian and authoritarian governments involved in the war. In the early 1950s, Adorno and his colleagues published The Authoritarian Personality, which proposed that authoritarianism was a psychological trait or personality type distinguished by strict obedience to authority and oppression of diverse ideas and beliefs.47 Although The Authoritarian Personality was based on a Freudian psychological analysis, scholars since the 1950s have tried to understand authoritarianism as a political attitude, its origins and causes, and its implications for democratic government. For example, if a greater number of people adopt authoritarian attitudes, they might be more willing to allow for greater government control, more limited civil liberties and civil rights, and a weakening of democratic principles.

In considering the causes of authoritarian attitudes, political scientists, sociologists, and psychologists have often linked it to beliefs in traditionalism, a need to conform to group norms, fundamentalism, a need for social cohesion, and even racial prejudice. One dominant theme in the research is the influence of parental authority when an individual was young; those with more authoritarian attitudes have been found to have had parents who imposed stricter rules during their upbringing. In turn, authoritarian individuals tend to be more intolerant of minorities, to support greater use of military force, and “to condone and even endorse illegal and blatantly undemocratic government behavior.”48

One of the major findings since the 1950s is that authoritarian attitudes are often linked with right-wing, conservative political beliefs. This does not mean that there are no authoritarians who would be considered liberal but that there was a far higher number of authoritarians with right-wing beliefs.49 In assessing the prevalence of authoritarian attitudes in the United States, for instance, Cizmar and her colleagues found that the number of Americans exhibiting authoritarian attitudes has risen since the mid-twentieth century with a clear impact on political polarization itself.50 Indeed, Hetherington and Weiler make this argument explicit: that increasing polarization in the United States is most directly attributable to the rise of authoritarian attitudes.51 The rise of authoritarian attitudes is not limited to the United States; right-wing, authoritarian groups and political parties have emerged across Europe in recent years promoting racist policies, limits on judicial independence, and anti-immigrant policies. Norris notes that the share of votes that authoritarian leaders and parties have been achieving has consistently risen over this same time period.52

Why authoritarian attitudes and leaders are on the rise is more complicated. Norris suggests that the shift is a result of a backlash against more progressive social 

Nationalism and Ethnic Conflict

One of the increasingly important concerns that has drawn attention worldwide is the phenomenon of nationalism and the consequences that flow from it. Before defining nationalism as a concept, it is appropriate to draw the distinction between state and nation. A state, while the definition is diffuse and uncertain, refers to institutions and forms of government, whereas nation refers to a social or ethnic grouping of people. Based on this, nationalism is a sense of group identity and belonging that often includes a desire for self-government based on national identity. For centuries, small states were generally referred to as nation-states or states that reflected national identities.

Career Guidance

State development requires the work of thousands of people andorganizations other than state governments. International nongovernmental organizations often assist less-developed states in improving their infrastructure, health and social outcomes, and economy. These organizations include the United Nations and its subsidiaries such as the World Health Organization and International Monetary Fund, the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation, Doctors without Borders, and Oxfam International. Working for a nongovernmental organization such as one of these can be an exciting career path for those with degrees in political science and an interest in comparative politics or development studies.

The concept of nationalism is not new; Hah and Martin note that it was identified as early as 1836.65 Woodrow Wilson made nationalism and self-determination a foundation of his Fourteen Points proposal following World War I. Yet, while the former political scientist Wilson was calling for self-determination, his erstwhile allies in Europe, France and the United Kingdom, were redrawing the borders of the Middle East. In their quest for colonial territory, France and the United Kingdom drew territorial lines with no concern for the traditional ethnic and religious concerns that dominated the Middle East. As such, somewhat artificial countries were created—for example, Iraq, that had no common history but different religious and ethnic groups that do not care to live together.

Conflicts spurred on by nationalist and ethnic identities are increasing in the modern world. The end of the Cold War and the increase of globalization has brought more groups into contact with each other, leading to the potential for more conflicts.66 But nationalism can be a potentially valuable attitude as well; the belief in American values and ideals is a sort of nationalism that binds and knits a country together. But it “can just as plausibly be seen as a kind of particularism denying non-citizens or culturally deviant citizens full human rights and, in the extreme cases, even denying them membership in the community of humans.”67 It is this more extreme case that has led to conflict between groups such as the Hutus and Tutsis in Rwanda, between Sunni and Shia Muslims in the Middle East, and Arabs and non-Arabs in Darfur.

Nationalism can exist in many forms. Economic nationalism promotes a country’s economy by protecting industries and businesses within the country and instituting tariffs and taxes to protect the domestic economy from outside economies. There exists a thread of black nationalism in American discourse. Then there is the ethnic nationalism that can often lead to the deadly conflict we see around the world today.

So why should nationalism necessarily lead to conflict? In many ethnic conflicts, the concern is about territory and sovereignty over a given parcel of land. If there are multiple ethnic or religious groups in one area and both believe they should have sovereignty, conflict will naturally develop. The Arab-Israeli conflict is yet another example of the types of conflicts that arise. And like the Arab-Israeli struggle, there is no easy answer to the question; there is no way to create more land and both groups want it and do not want to share it. Thus nationalism can also prevent solutions to conflicts.

Certainly, political scientists have been able to connect nationalism to a variety of consequences, most significantly war.68 However, de las Casas suggests that the aspects of nationalism that foster a sense of group identity and pride can lead to outcomes such as a stronger economy and less government corruption.69 It seems, then, that nationalism, like many of the concepts we’ve discussed thus far, isn’t necessarily good or bad; it’s in how it’s used that creates positive or negative effects.

Chapter Summary

· Comparative politics is not only a field of study in political science but a research method. The comparative method provides a means of testing hypotheses while controlling for potentially confounding variables.

· The idea of the state is a significant one in politics. States are key actors in the political system, and being a strong or weak state can come with significant consequences. However, given increasing globalization and the role of international organizations, the role of the state could be shifting.

· Communist countries played a key role in the twentieth century and into the twenty-first century. Political scientists have struggled to understand communist politics and patterns of developing in postcommunist countries.

· Many states around the world continue to develop in terms of politics, economics, and strength. Development studies examine best practices and help to identify key goals, but they are often hampered by pro-Western ideals that may not fit culturally elsewhere.

· Nationalistic attitudes and beliefs have contributed to both development and conflict. Ethnicity can reinforce nationalism and contribute to conflicts around the world.

Key Terms

· authoritarian: Type of government that, while still exerting almost complete control, allows for some political freedoms although there are no political protections or democratic procedures in place

· Cold War: Period of ideological conflict from the end of World War II to 1991 between the Soviet Union and the United States

· comparative politics: The study of countries and politics around the world

· democracy: States that have free, fair, and frequent elections and in which civil liberties are recognized and protected

· development: How advanced a state is in terms of economics and social problems

· economic nationalism: Attitudes in favor of protecting a country’s economic independence and autonomy

· failed state: No entity that can exert sovereignty over territory

· glasnost: Series of Soviet political reforms in the 1980s

· globalization: Increasing economic and other connections between states

· modernization theory: Less-developed countries (LDCs) to developmentally advance as they adopted more Western political and economic practices

· nationalism: Sense of group identity and belonging that often includes a desire for self-government based on national identity

· perestroika: Series of Soviet economic reforms in the 1980s

· selection bias: Occurs when the cases that are chosen to be studied are systematically skewed

· state: Groups of people living under a single governmental system

· state strength: The ability of states to control political outcomes

· totalitarianism: Type of government in which the authorities have total and complete control over their society

Discussion Questions

1. What is the comparative method? Give an example of how you can use it to study comparative politics.

2. What are some of the different ways democracy can be defined?

3. What are some ways in which democracy, globalization, and development might be related?

4. Do you believe globalization is a good or bad thing? What about nationalism? Why or why not?

Further Reading

Almond, Gabriel A., and Sidney Verba. The Civic Culture: Political Attitudes and Democracy in Five Nations. Newbury Park, CA: Sage, 1989.

Dahl, Robert A. Polyarchy: Participation and Opposition. New Haven, CT: Yale University Press, 1972.

Downs, Anthony. An Economic Theory of Democracy. New York: Harper and Brothers, 1957.

Lijphart, Arend. “Comparative Politics and the Comparative Method.” American Political Science Review 65, no. 3 (1971): 682–693.

Putnam, Robert D. Making Democracy Work: Civic Traditions in Modern Italy. Princeton, NJ: Princeton University Press, 1994.

Freedom House:  https://freedomhouse.org

United Nations Millennium Development Goals:  www.un.org/millenniumgoals

Notes

1. Arend Lijphart, “Comparative Politics and the Comparative Method,” American Political Science Review 65, no. 3 (1971): 682 (emphasis in the original).

2. Ibid., 683.

3. David Collier and James Mahoney, “Insights and Pitfalls: Selection Bias in Qualitative Research,” World Politics 49, no. 1 (1996): 59.

4. Peter J. Steinberger, “Hobbes, Rousseau, and the Modern Conception of the State,” The Journal of Politics 70, no. 3 (2008): 595–611.

5. J. P. Nettl, “The State as a Conceptual Variable,” World Politics 20, no. 4 (1968): 559, 561.

6. Stephen D. Krasner, “Approaches to the State: Alternative Conceptions and Historical Dynamics,” Comparative Politics 16, no. 2 (1984): 223–246.

7. Krasner, “Approaches to the State.”

8. Timothy Mitchell, “The Limits of the State: Beyond the Statist Approaches and Their Critics,” American Political Science Review 85, no. 1 (1991): 77–96.

9. Ibid., 78.

10. David J. Samuels, Comparative Politics (Boston: Pearson, 2003).

11. Tuong Vu, “Studying the State through State Formation,” World Politics 62, no. 1 (2010): 148–175.

12. Evenly B. Davidheiser, “Strong States, Weak States: The Role of the State in Revolution,” Comparative Politics 24, no. 4 (1992): 463–475.

13. Eghosa E. Osaghe, “Fragile States,” Development in Practice 17, no. 4/5 (2007): 691.

14. James A. Piazza, “Incubators of Terror: Do Failed and Failing States Promote Transnational Terrorism?” International Studies Quarterly 52, no. 3 (2008): 469–488.

15. Stewart Patrick, “‘Failed’ States and Global Security: Empirical Questions and Policy Dilemmas, International Studies Review 9, no. 4 (2007): 644–662.

16. Seymour Martin Lipset, “Some Social Requisites of Democracy: Economic Development and Political Legitimacy,” American Political Science Review 53, no. 1 (1959): 71.

17. Robert Dahl, A Preface to Democratic Theory (Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 1956).

18. Anthony Downs, An Economic Theory of Democracy (New York: Harper and Brothers, 1957).

19. Kenneth A. Bollen, “Issues in the Comparative Measurement of Political Democracy,” American Sociological Review 45, no. 3 (1980): 372.

20. Edward N. Muller, “Democracy, Economic Development, and Income Inequality,” American Sociological Review 53 (1988): 54.

21. Kenneth A. Bollen and Pamela Paxton, “Subjective Measures of Liberal Democracy,” Comparative Political Studies 33, no. 1 (2000): 58–86.

22. Edward N. Muller and Mitchell A. Seligson, “Civic Culture and Democracy: The Question of Causal Relationships,” American Political Science Review 88, no. 3 (1994): 635–652.

23. Michael L. Ross, “Does Taxation Lead to Representation?” British Journal of Political Science 34, no. 2 (2004): 229–249.

24. Anibal Perez-Linan and Scott Mainwaring, “Regime Legacies and Levels of Democracy: Evidence from Latin America,” Comparative Politics 45, no. 4 (2013): 379–397.

25. Robert D. Putnam, Making Democracy Work: Civic Traditions in Modern Italy (Princeton, NJ: Princeton University Press, 1994).

26. Matthew A. Baum and David A. Lake, “The Political Economy of Growth: Democracy and Human Capital,” American Journal of Political Science 47, no. 2 (2003): 333–347.

27. Quan Li and Rafael Reuveny, “Democracy and Environmental Degradation,” International Studies Quarterly 50, no. 4 (2006): 935–956.