How Democracies Die: What History Reveals About Our Future

320 pages

English language

Published Dec. 26, 2018 by Crown.

ISBN:
978-1-5247-6293-3
Copied ISBN!
OCLC Number:
986837776
Goodreads:
35356384

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(19 reviews)

1 edition

Watching a car crash in slow motion — from the inside

A calm, reasoned walk through the facts that most people in the US already know in their terrified bones. From the changes in parties' primary process to the long shadow of slavery, Levitsky walks us step by step through the factors threatening US democracy, and the uncodified norms which have tenuously held it in place all these years. The title is in the plural, but there's really only one democracy at issue in this book: the USA. There are plenty of references to other countries and what they've experienced, but those clearly just serve to show what might or might not happen here.

A clear and accessible read, though not an up-beat one.

Review of 'How Democracies Die: What History Reveals About Our Future' on 'Goodreads'

The strength of the book is a good overview of authoritarian regimes that is well curated but not especially new in insight. The rest from the book suffers from a massively contorted so-called moderate tonetroll that has an an axiom (a) American democracy is great and (b) so far we had good politicians. That leads to incredible like stating that increasing polarization "paradoxically" followed the first "real" democracy in the US after 1965. The authors simply refuse to draw conclusions beyond the narrowest of margins, leading to their main recipes for fighting authoritarianism being the old "politicians need to respect each other" hogwash that fully ignores how human lives are impacted by inhuman policies. So, probably as much as you'd expect from Harvard professors that unironically cite David Brooks. Next time I need to put more work into googling authors...

None

Notice: I've read the german eBook version, because I couldn't find an english eBook.

Its an interesting book. The reader learns about the rules of democracy, especially about the unwritten behaviour rules that make the system work. The book tells a lot of history of the United States and how it made laws to exclude afroamerican people from voting.

The big lesson is that democracies usually don't fail in one catastrophic event, its just a number of small changes in behaviour that make the system fail in the long run. It also explains that Trump is destroying much of the democratic guidelines, but that he got elected is a result that the respect between the political players eroded over time.

I decided for a 4 star rating because the book seems a bit biased to me. The authors explain a lot about e.g. the attempts of the Nazis in the …

Review of 'How democracies die' on 'Goodreads'

“If twenty-five years ago, someone had described to you a country in which candidates threatened to lock up their rivals, political opponents accused the government of stealing the election or establishing a dictatorship, and parties used their legislative majorities to impeach presidents and steal supreme court seats, you might have thought of Ecuador or Romania, You probably would not have thought of the United States,” write Steven Levitsky and Daniel Ziblatt, two political scientists from Harvard University, in their book, How Democracies Die: What History Reveals About Our Future.

Those of us who follow and study the history and the politics of the United States we watched the 2016 presidential election with a sense of disbelief. The night of the election of Donald Trump to the United States Presidency has hit the country and the world like a shock wave. The Americans had elected as their President a man who …

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