Backsliders

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A01=Susan C. Stokes
accountability
Andres Manuel Lopez Obrador
Author_Susan C. Stokes
authoritarian drift
autocracy
autocratization
backsliding
ballot box
Category=JPB
Category=JPHL
Category=JPHV
checks and balances
civic engagement
civil liberties
civil society
competitive authoritarianism
constitutional crisis
Democracy
democratic backsliding
democratic breakdown
democratic consolidation
democratic culture
democratic decay
democratic erosion
democratic governance
democratic institutions
democratic legitimacy
democratic quality
democratic resilience
democratic stability
Donald Trump
electoral democracy
electoral manipulation
eq_bestseller
eq_isMigrated=1
eq_isMigrated=2
eq_nobargain
eq_non-fiction
eq_society-politics
ethnonationalism
executive aggrandizement
executive power
globalization
governance failure
hybrid regimes
illiberal democracy
income inequality
institutional capture
institutional reform
institutional strength
Jair Bolsonaro
judicial independence
liberal democracy
media freedom
minority rights
misinformation
neoliberalism
NGOs
opposition movements
pluralism
polarization
political accountability
political competition
political crisis
political engagement
political norms
political participation
political polarization
political rights
political violence
populism
presidential power
press freedom
press independence
rule of law
separation of powers
Susan Stokes
term limits
Viktor Orban
voter mobilization

Product details

  • ISBN 9780691271545
  • Dimensions: 140 x 216mm
  • Publication Date: 09 Sep 2025
  • Publisher: Princeton University Press
  • Publication City/Country: US
  • Product Form: Hardback
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Why democracy is under assault across the globe by the leaders entrusted to preserve it

Democracies around the world are getting swept up in a wave of democratic erosion. Since the beginning of the twenty-first century, two dozen presidents and prime ministers have attacked their countries’ democratic institutions, violating political norms, aggrandizing their own powers, and often trying to overstay their terms in office.

The Backsliders offers the first general explanation for this wave. Drawing on a wealth of original research, Susan Stokes shows that increasing income inequality, a legacy of late twentieth-century globalization, left some countries especially at risk of backsliding toward autocracy. Left-behind voters were drawn to right-wing ethnonationalist leaders in countries like the United States, India, and Brazil, and to left-wing populist ones in countries like Venezuela, Mexico, and South Africa.

Unlike military leaders who abruptly kill democracies in coups, elected leaders who erode them gradually must maintain some level of public support. They do so by encouraging polarization among citizens and also by trash-talking their democracies: claiming that the institutions they attack are corrupt and incompetent. They tell voters that these institutions should be torn down and replaced by ones under the executive’s control. The Backsliders describes how journalists, judges, NGOs, and opposition leaders can put the brakes on democratic erosion, and how voters can do so through political engagement and the power of the ballot box.

Susan C. Stokes is the Blake Distinguished Service Professor of Political Science at the University of Chicago, where she chairs the Chicago Center on Democracy. Her books include Mandates and Democracy: Neoliberalism by Surprise in Latin America and (with Thad Dunning, Marcelo Nazareno, and Valeria Brusco) Brokers, Voters, and Clientelism: The Puzzle of Distributive Politics.

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