An Australian Book Review Best Book of the Year A disturbing in-depth
exposé of the antidemocratic practices of despotic governments now
sweeping the world. One day they’ll be like us. That was once the
West’s complacent and self-regarding assumption about countries
emerging from poverty, imperial rule, or communism. But many have
hardened into something very different from liberal democracy: what
the eminent political thinker John Keane describes as a new form of
despotism. And one day, he warns, we may be more like them. Drawing on
extensive travels, interviews, and a lifetime of thinking about
democracy and its enemies, Keane shows how governments from Russia and
China through Central Asia to the Middle East and Europe have mastered
a formidable combination of political tools that threaten the
established ideals and practices of power-sharing democracy. They
mobilize the rhetoric of democracy and win public support for workable
forms of government based on patronage, dark money, steady economic
growth, sophisticated media controls, strangled judiciaries, dragnet
surveillance, and selective violence against their opponents. Casting
doubt on such fashionable terms as dictatorship, autocracy, fascism,
and authoritarianism, Keane makes a case for retrieving and
refurbishing the old term “despotism” to make sense of how these
regimes function and endure. He shows how they cooperate regionally
and globally and draw strength from each other’s resources while
breeding global anxieties and threatening the values and institutions
of democracy. Like Montesquieu in the eighteenth century, Keane
stresses the willing complicity of comfortable citizens in all these
trends. And, like Montesquieu, he worries that the practices of
despotism are closer to home than we care to admit.
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Produktdetaljer
ISBN
9780674246713
Publisert
2020
Utgiver
Harvard University Press
Språk
Product language
Engelsk
Format
Product format
Digital bok
Forfatter