ABSTRACT

Pathways of Autocratization addresses contemporary global politics’ one of the most important questions: how does a country regress from a democracy to an autocracy?

 

This book offers a novel framework for understanding the processes that erode democracy and lead to autocracy and explains a specific instance of democratic backsliding in Bangladesh: the world’s eighth most populous country. With probing analysis of events and trends of Bangladeshi politics, especially since 2009, the book contextualizes the country’s autocratization process within global trends and compares it with others which have trod a similar path in recent decades, including Bolivia, Cambodia, Hungary, Poland, the Philippines and Turkey.  The book discusses the implications of institutional changes, the role of pliant media, the contribution of ideology, and the conduct of international actors in the autocratization process while also mapping future trajectories for the country.

 

Succinct, incisive, and thought provoking, this book is rich in its theoretical robustness and empirical details. This is a must-read for anyone interested in understanding the dynamics of democratic backsliding and prospects for reversing this trend.

chapter |2 pages

Introduction

chapter 2|8 pages

Why Bangladesh warrants attention?

chapter 3|23 pages

Bangladesh's quiet slide to autocracy

Roles of institutional changes and media

chapter 4|21 pages

Bangladesh's quiet slide to autocracy

Roles of ideology and external actors

chapter |14 pages

Conclusions

Is the Bangladesh case unique? What's next?