ABSTRACT

This book brings together the conceptual and theoretical writings of Joseph Schumpeter, Robert A. Dahl, Guillermo O’Donnell, and T. H. Marshall.  It demonstrates that most of the different conceptions of democracy in the democratization literature can be ordered in one systematic regime typology that distinguishes between ‘thinner’ and ‘thicker’ definitions of democracy.

The authors argue that the empirical pattern revealed by this typology is explained by the combination of internal structural constraints and international factors facilitating democracy. The result of such contending forces is that most of the democratizations in recent decades have only produced competitive elections, rather than ‘more demanding’ attributes of democracy such as political liberties, the rule of law, and social rights.

Examining theoretical and empirical approaches to measuring, defining and understanding democracy, the book will be of interest to scholars of political theory and comparative politics in general and democratization studies in particular.

chapter |13 pages

Introduction

part I|38 pages

Conceptualizing and Measuring Democracy

chapter 2|15 pages

Conceptualizing and Measuring Democracy I

Toward a Classical Typology

chapter 3|10 pages

Conceptualizing and Measuring Democracy II

Including Social Rights?

part II|30 pages

Trends Across Space and Time

chapter 4|12 pages

Post-communist regime types

Hierarchy Across Space

chapter 5|16 pages

Marshall Revisited

The Sequence of Citizenship Rights in the Twenty-First Century

part III|32 pages

Explaining the Hierarchy

chapter 6|16 pages

Stateness First?