Two Harvard professors explain the stages in which governments collapse - and how we can prevent this.
Steven Levitsky and Daniel Ziblatt are Professors of Government at Harvard University and have spent their careers studying democracies in crisis. Levitsky is the author of Competitive Authoritarianism and is the recipient of numerous teaching awards. Ziblatt is the author, most recently, of Conservative Parties and the Birth of Democracy. A New York Times op-ed written by the pair - Is Donald Trump a Threat to Democracy? - was shared over 200k times in December 2016.
Anyone who is concerned about the future of democracy should read
this brisk, accessible book. Anyone who is not concerned should
definitely read it.
*Daron Acemoglu, co-author of Why Nations Fail*
How Democracies Die by Steven Levitsky and Daniel Ziblatt is a
useful primer on the importance of norms, institutional restraints
and civic participation in maintaining a democracy - and how
quickly those things can erode when we're not paying attention
*President Barack Obama*
With great energy and integrity [Levitsky and Ziblatt] apply their
expertise to the current problems of the United States.
*Timothy Snyder, author of On Tyranny*
We owe the authors a debt of thanks for bringing their deep
understanding to bear on the central political issue of the
day.
*Francis Fukuyama, author of Political Order and Political
Decay*
What's the worst thing to happen to US democracy recently? Most
answers to that question start and end with Donald Trump. Steven
Levitsky and Daniel Ziblatt, though as horrified by Trump as
anyone, try to take a wider view. This book looks to history to
provide a guide for defending democratic norms when they are under
threat, and finds that it is possible to fight back. Provocative
and readable.
*The Guardian*
There are two must-read books about the Trump presidency at the
moment. This is the one you probably haven't heard of. It is also
the one that is most useful to British readers. Steven Levitsky and
Daniel Ziblatt are anti-Donald Trump politics professors at
Harvard. And the big advantage of political scientists over even
the shrewdest and luckiest of eavesdropping journalists is that
they have the training to give us a bigger picture.
They set out some rules about the slow, internal collapse of
democracies, which are entirely relevant to Britain...
*The Times*
The greatest of the many merits of Steven Levitsky and Daniel
Ziblatt's contribution to what will doubtless be the ballooning
discipline of democracy death studies is their rejection of western
exceptionalism. They tell inspiring stories I had not heard
before...excellent, scholarly and readable, alarming and
level-headed.
*The Guardian*
The political-science text in vogue this winter is How Democracies
Die.
*The New Yorker*
[An] important new book.
*New York Times*
Levitsky and Ziblatt show how democracies have collapsed
elsewhere-not just through violent coups, but more commonly (and
insidiously) through a gradual slide into authoritarianism.... How
Democracies Die is a lucid and essential guide to what can happen
here.
*New York Times*
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