ABSTRACT

Non-Western Encounters with Democratization offers diverse perspectives on democracy and transition spanning the Middle East and North Africa to East Asia. This unique collection of essays, drawn from contextually rich case studies presents readers with a variety of non-western encounters with democracy and provides important insights into the dramatic political and social transformations in these regions over the past decades. The book offers a deeper understanding of democratization and challenges the image of western democracy as a universal model to which non-western societies aspire. Taking the events of the Arab Spring as the starting point, international contributors look at why the uprisings that rapidly spread across North Africa and the Middle East had a strong resonance in East Asia but failed to inspire similar revolts. Through direct engagement with non-western experiences of political transition the book demonstrates a unique coherence across two regions relatively under explored in democratization literature.

chapter |6 pages

Introduction

Imagining Democracy after the Arab Spring

part I|41 pages

Imagining Democracy

chapter 2|18 pages

Confucianism's Role-Based Political Ethic

Free Speech, Remonstrative Speech, and Political Change in East Asia

part II|91 pages

Imagining Democracy in the Middle East and North Africa

chapter 3|16 pages

Returning to the Tunisian Revolution

Some Reflections on Political Change during the Arab Spring

chapter 4|18 pages

Arab Spring and Middle East Democratization

Issues and Challenges

chapter 5|18 pages

A Gendered Perspective on the Arab Spring

Arab Women Caught Between Internal and External Conflicts

chapter 6|24 pages

The Arab Uprising

State of Emergency and Constitutional Reform

part III|95 pages

East Asian Perspectives

chapter 8|20 pages

Looking East

China's Jasmine Revolutions in Comparative Perspective

chapter 9|18 pages

Enough to Get By?

A Discussion of China's Minimum Livelihood Guarantee as Social Stability Mechanism

chapter 10|16 pages

Cultural Resources for Democracy

The Case of South Korean Democratization and the Nineteenth-Century Tonghak Movement

chapter 12|20 pages

Non-Western Visions of Development?

Japan's Official Development Assistance and Global Governmentality