Steven Levitsky and Daniel Ziblatt are Professors of Government at Harvard University. Levitsky’s research focuses on Latin America and the developing world. He is the author of Competitive Authoritarianism and is the recipient of numerous teaching awards. Ziblatt studies Europe from the nineteenth century to the present. He is the author, most recently, of Conservative Parties and the Birth of Democracy. Both Levitsky and Ziblatt have written for Vox and The New York Times, among other publications.
“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.”—The New York Times
“The most important book of the Trump era was not Bob Woodward’s
Fear or Michael Wolff’s Fire and Fury or any of the other
bestselling exposes of the White House circus. Arguably it was a
wonkish tome by two Harvard political scientists, Steven Levitsky
and Daniel Ziblatt, published a year into Donald Trump’s presidency
and entitled How Democracies Die.”—The Economist
“If you want to understand what’s happening to our country, the
book you really need to read is How Democracies Die.”—Paul
Krugman
“Fair warning: reading Levitsky and Ziblatt will leave you very,
very unsettled. They make a powerful case that we really and truly
are in uncharted territory, living in a moment when the line
between difficult times and dark times has blurred.”—Washington
Monthly
“Carefully researched and persuasive . . . the authors show the
fragility of even the best democracies and also caution politicians
. . . who think they can somehow co-opt autocrats without getting
burned. . . . How Democracies Die provides a guide for Americans of
all political persuasions for what to avoid.”—USA Today
“Scholarly and readable, alarming and level-headed . . . 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.”—The Guardian
“[An] important new book.”—Nicholas Kristof, The New York Times
“The political-science text in vogue this winter is How Democracies
Die.”—The New Yorker
“How Democracies Die studies the modern history of apparently
healthy democracies that have slid into autocracy. It is hard to
read this fine book without coming away terribly concerned about
the possibility Trump might inflict a mortal wound on the health of
the republic.... It is simplistic to expect boots marching in the
streets, but there will be a battle for democracy.”—Jonathan Chait,
New York magazine
“The great strength of Levitsky and Ziblatt’s How Democracies Die
is that it rejects the exceptionalist account of US democracy.
Their lens is comparative. The authors say America is not immune to
the trends that have led to democracy’s collapse in other parts of
the world.”—Financial Times
“A powerful wake-up call.”—Foreign Affairs
“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.... [Levitsky and Ziblatt]
bring to bear useful global and historical context . . . [showing]
the mistakes democratic politicians make as they let dangerous
demagogues into the heart of power.”—The Sunday Times
“If this were fiction, the thrills of this book would remind you of
the thrills you had when you first read 1984, It Can’t Happen Here,
The Plot Against America and The Handmaid’s Tale. If this were
fiction, you could lie in the sand and enjoy the read. But this
book is not fiction. And this book is not just about the past. And
this book is not just about other countries. [It] should be on your
reading list this summer.”—Tufts Now
“Steven Levitsky and Daniel Ziblatt offer one of the best forensic
accounts available of the crimes against democracy in America....
The diagnosis is compelling, and their book is essential, even
compulsive, reading.”—Survival: Global Politics and Strategy
“[How Democracies Die] is a stellar deep-dive into a series of
modern democracies that ceased to be.”—Daily Kos
"Maybe have a drink before digging into this one. Levitsky and
Ziblatt trace the fall of democracies throughout history with
agonizing clarity, going right up to our current perilous
moment.”—Entertainment Weekly
“Levitsky and Ziblatt are not entirely pessimistic . . . but they
leave readers in no doubt that they should be worried about the
state of American democracy.”—Slate
“Chilling . . . A provocative analysis of the parallels between
Donald Trump's ascent and the fall of other democracies.”—Kirkus
Reviews
“Steven Levitsky and Daniel Ziblatt have offered a brilliant
diagnosis of the most important issue facing our world: Can
democracy survive? With clinical precision and an extraordinary
grasp of history, they point to the warning signs of decay and
define the obligations of those who would preserve free government.
If there is an urgent book for you to read at this moment, it is
How Democracies Die."—E.J. Dionne Jr., co-author of One Nation
After Trump
“Levitsky and Ziblatt are leading scholars of democracy in other
parts of the world, who with great energy and integrity now apply
their expertise to the current problems of the United States. The
reader feels the intellectual excitement, and also the political
warning, as the authors draw the connections from their own vast
knowledge to the chaos that we experience each day.”—Timothy
Snyder, author of On Tyranny
“We live in perilous times. Anyone who is concerned about the
future of American democracy should read this brisk, accessible
book. Anyone who is not concerned should definitely read it.”—Daron
Acemoglu, co-author of Why Nations Fail
“Readers will not find an anti-Trump screed in How Democracies Die.
The book is more erudite than alarmist . . . but that makes
[Levitsky and Ziblatt’s] clarity on the risk of both Trump and
wider political developments all the more powerful.”—California
magazine
“All Americans who care about the future of their country should
read this magisterial, compelling book, which sweeps across the
globe and through history to analyze how democracies die. The
result is an unforgettable framework for diagnosing the state of
affairs here at home and our prospects for recovery.”—Danielle
Allen, author of Our Declaration and Cuz
“Two years ago, a book like this could not have been written: two
leading political scientists who are expert in the breakdown of
democracy in other parts of the world using that knowledge to
inform Americans of the dangers their democracy faces today. 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
“In this brilliant historical synthesis, Levitsky and Ziblatt show
how the actions of elected leaders around the world have paved the
road to democratic failure, and why the United States is now
vulnerable to this same downward spiral. This book should be widely
and urgently read as a clarion call to restore the shared beliefs
and practices—beyond our formal constitution—that constitute the
essential ‘guardrails’ for preserving democracy.”—Larry Diamond,
author of The Spirit of Democracy
“Thorough and well-argued . . . the biggest strength of How
Democracies Die is its bluntness of language in describing American
history—a bluntness that often goes missing when we discuss our own
past.”—Pacific Standard
“Required reading for every American . . . [How Democracies Die]
shows the daily slings and arrows that can gradually crush our
liberties, without the drama of a revolution or a military
coup.”—The Philadelphia Inquirer
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