1st Edition

Does Everyone Want Democracy? Insights from Mongolia

By Paula L. W. Sabloff Copyright 2013
    282 Pages
    by Routledge

    282 Pages
    by Routledge

    Do all people desire democracy? For at least a century, the idea that democracy is a universal good has been an article of faith for American policy makers. Paula Sabloff challenges this conventional wisdom about who wants democracy and why. Arguing that certain universal human aspirations exist, she shows how local realities are highly particularistic and explains that culture, history, and values are critical to the study of political systems. Her fascinating study of Mongolia—feudal until it became the first country to follow Russia into communism and now struggling with post-socialist democratization—is a model for investigating how everyday people around the world actually think about and implement democracy on their own terms.

    Chapter 1 Introduction; Chapter 2 Democracy Means Independence and Freedom; Chapter 3 Democracy Means Human Rights; Chapter 4 Democracy Brings Political Freedom; Chapter 5 Democracy Brings Economic Freedom; Chapter 6 A Democratic Government Is Responsible to Its Citizens; Chapter 7 Citizens’ Rights or Civic Duty: Citizens’ Relationship to Democratic Governance; Chapter 8 Conclusion: Shared Experiences, Shared Ideas;

    Biography

    Sabloff, Paula L. W.