TRASHFUTURE - UNLOCKED Riley's Commie Book Club: The End of the Transition Paradigm
Episode Date: January 20, 2019Riley's commie book club unlocked for you this weekend! Listen to Riley talk about his experiences with International Relations as an academic discipline via a paper by Thomas Carothers, The End of th...e Transition Paradigm.
Transcript
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Hello and welcome back again to Riley doing a solo thing because that's right. It's time
for one of Riley's book clubs, but we're doing it a bit different this week because
it's Riley's festive book club and rather than talk about a piece of writing that I
like that it deals with sort of leftist thought or theory or sort of describes many of the
problems that we might be seeing existing in our society in which we live blah blah blah
blah fucking hell. I'm Milo's in the studio with me Milo's in the studio with me doing
something else. He's be god damn it. This is going to be very hard and the worst thing
is that I'm doing a subject that's very easily parody parodiable because I'm not like I said
I'm not talking about one of these books that I might recommend. I'm actually talking about
an academic paper called the end of the transition paradigm which is you might say what the hell
is that? Well, it's it's a piece of international relations theory because I wanted to talk about
the absolute sort of decrepit nonsense that is international relations theory in this one paper
by this guy Thomas Carothers that and he's like a Carnegie endowment goon like he was like literally
involved in quote unquote democracy promotion in Latin America in the 1980s like he is one of the
worst people but he's written this article that actually like is a rare moment of honesty for
the discipline of international relations so we're going to go we're going to get into it.
So international relations is the subject that produces just the most incredible titles for
articles and journals like foreign policy or foreign affairs or whatever so it can be titled
something like you know norms in retreat changing paradigms of global governance and the WTO and
beyond or obstinate or obsolete the fate of the nation-state in the case of western Europe
or something like the honor of dignity a statesman reflects on diplomacy after populism one of those
is a real title and I invite you to guess which one because IR is this very pompous fake academic
subject it's riven with insecurity about whether or not it's a real science and it's a kind of
microcosm about what kinds of scholarship are taken seriously with the discipline is traditionally cast
between liberals who believe that economic integration makes war unprofitable and the more
sort of hard-line hawkish thinkers who think that military might is the only thing that matters
and it's a deeply it's a deeply sort of European or Atlanticist discipline so Euro-American
because the first IR department was started in the University of Aberystwyth in Wales and I think
1919 and the whole point of early sort of IR scholarship was to try and understand precisely
what happened in sort of the first world war how it came about potentially how it might be
stopped in future but also to like train the sort of this the sort of coterie of diplomats and so
on who'd be running the League of Nations which as we all know went very very well now IR is
distinct from what you might call international history international history is I think defined
very well by sort of a favorite figure of mine from the 18th century Friedrich Schiller who
articulated that sort of statement of purpose which that the international historian must select
from the stream of events those that exercise an essential unmistakable and easily comprehensible
influence on the present shape of the world and the situation of the contemporary generation
this is I think a basically worthwhile pursuit international relations sort of as a parody
of this discipline it's it's the dubious science of taking these efforts to explain why events
happen and treating them like well a hard science with sort of very set down and universalizable
theories I'll go through some of the basics I'm going to get to the paper in a few minutes I
just want to talk about the discipline a little bit in general so realist quote unquote realist
theories and I say this with a capital R I'm not saying they're more realistic than others it's just
this is what they call themselves because they all have brain worms realist theories suggest
that states basically interact in such a way where they're paranoid about one another because
the entire international sphere is about survival of the fittest because so the core
contention of international relations that sort of makes it different from international history
other than just its sort of reliance on theory is that it conceives of this sphere called the
international that is distinct from others you know national individual and so on and the
international system is particularly distinct because unlike any other realm of human existence
it's anarchic that doesn't mean it's chaotic but it means that a group of basically like objects so
states are interacting with one another largely making up the rules as they go along based on
their power to do so there's no cop you can't call 911 on the United States because you know who
you're gonna call so to speak you know in global politics there is no there's no police force there's
no recourse you're basically there helping yourself and if you can't help yourself then someone else
is going to help themselves to what you have so you know how do you punish the usa if it commits
a crime against cuba how do you call it a crime moreover if there are no rules so that's actually
that's the one bit of international relations that I think is interesting which is it is this it is
the only study of modern if you like modern officially recognized bodies that are interacting
with no legitimate no fully legitimate system outside them as a fully legitimate not to mean
like you know the laws of the united states are legitimate but they're widely believed to be legitimate
and and international relations it's all kind of contested it's the it's the murkiest place
in politics that's actually kind of interesting but with their commitment to keeping their
discipline sort of having the trappings of science and having the trappings of objectivity
it's basically got the same disease that's rendered modern analytic philosophy a more or less useless
discipline increasingly concerned as it is with naval gazing and debating how many angels can
dance in the head of a pin so let's go through a couple of this sort of meta theories so there are
realist type theories I don't mean they're more realistic than others but they've been called
realist because they are all about conflict and how cooperation fails because they're about states
being paranoid about one another I think the fact that they're called realist actually gives
a sense of like just how little these people really think that any kind of better world is
possible they're very very cynical very very game theory oriented like it all comes out of the
rand corporation and the work of of Nash on game theory they say they see the world in terms of
betrayals and even the fact that like the other schools of international relations except the
the title that this one school is the realists you know it's it's sort of it betrays that
that's this feeling that well even the liberals just sort of think that their failures this is
not very different from sort of how most liberals act anyway so realist theories are all about
looking at the way states interact in terms of absolute versus relative gains if I'm going
to strike a deal with you and I gain and you gain a little bit more I won't strike that deal
because you're going to might use that little bit more to kill me and states that are mistrustful
of others don't get killed because they're more cautious it's basically Darwin and some one of
them sort of more popular I feel like applied thinkers so like there are theorists there are
guys like Kenneth waltz or john mirshimer who international relations scholars who are listening
to this or people who've done useless math like degrees like I have well like I know who those
people are of course there are there are you know I are 101 but most people have never heard of them
because they're not really relevant except of course the people who make the policies that
kill the almost everyone these guys are the the eggheads in the ivory tower they just sort of
write and they might advise an occasional president but they mainly just do the thinking
and a more interesting example of a realist as a guy called george kennan now kennan was a
figure in the state department throughout the middle of the 20th century and he was you know
a fucking absolute ghoul who's like a little junior kissinger and he defined the or he helped
define the Truman doctrine of containing the soviet union and he sent this famous missive
called the long telegram called the sources of soviet conduct where he basically sort of
was hand wringing that the soviets were well actually have a selection from it so he says
the main element of any united states policy toward the soviet union must be a long term
patient but firm and vigilant containment of russian expansive tendencies soviet pressure
against the free institutions of the western world is something that can be contained by the
adroit and vigilant application of counterforce at a series of constantly shifting geographical
and political points corresponding to the shifts and maneuvers of soviet policy
but which cannot be charmed or talked out of existence so there are a few sort of
there's a lot going on in that one sort of relatively prominent passage from the long
telegram number one is that the it having a sort of this realist theory of international
relations sort of defined by all of these egg heads you know and cares about
george kennan had a language where he could say that well the russians are naturally expansive
and so we must regrettably be expansive it's the language of the u.s being unfortunately
dragged into wars it doesn't really want to fight the idea that all the u.s has gotten bogged down
in vietnam oh no we've we've been forced to sort of you know build missiles and point them at cuba
we've been forced to you know arm the mujahideen in afghanistan oh no we didn't want to do all this
but we had to and you can just see it's this firm vigilant containment of russian expansive
tendencies so well they're not they're violent we must be equally violent it's it it it prevents
even the possibility of talking about the taunt because it removes the possibility of trust
but also you can we talk about this sort of the vigilant application of counterforce
well this is just setting up the whole idea of we need to occupy or engage in regime change
more or less everywhere you know this one statement is responsible for
untold millions of deaths throughout the 20th century this one sentence based on this one
theory of international relations or rather you could say it's based on the u.s national interest
that sort of theorists of international relations then spend a lot of time dressing up as a kind of
scientific theory well like oh actually u.s interest well it's just science guys i'm just doing
i'm just i've run the numbers and apparently we have to invade vietnam and bomb cambodia so
liberal theories in the other hand and again much like realist theories are sort of a title
liberal theories are also a title because they're not necessarily they're not necessarily like
liberal as we might understand them because ir theory is all about relative gains enjoyed by
states so liberal theories just suggest the opposite of realist theories which is that states only
care about absolute gains which means that i'm going to if you know we're in a deal and i gain
five and you gain six well that's fine because i'm still better off than i was before it doesn't
matter that you're a little bit better off than i am because they say that and and the way they can
do that is they can create institutions to constrain one other's behavior so like
the world trade organization creates sets of frameworks in which they can interact where
you know their behavior will be known there's the shadow of the future so it's like the shadow of
the future refers the fact that yeah if i betray you now then everyone's going to know i'm untrustworthy
where sort of states can become interdependent on one another and then not attack each other over
time now once again you know this has been you know kind of right sort of not in any meaningful
sense because it it really only describes states that are already pretty much aligned you couldn't
possibly use this theory to to tell you anything about the relationship between say you know america
and you know north korea but that's again that's because these these theories are kind of very
rooted in late 20th century europe which is why they're so fundamentally bellicose i think
so one of the one of the one of the most prominent theories of this sort of school
and one that i think many of the listeners to this podcast will probably heard of
is called the democratic peace theory which suggests that democracies just don't go to
war with our democracies right or like you know because we have these institutions in common
because we're able to trust one another because we can interact with each other etc etc etc again
it's it's utterly absurd i mean it's complete nonsense you know what do we call american
democracy promotion in chile or when they installed pinoché or in iran and they installed the shah
in fact you know it's democracies don't go to war when the united states already likes them
basically uh and and and it's it's just sort of a cape for power and it's again it's something
that when we go into the article um we'll sort of see more more nakedly as a grift
but these are these are people like and mary slaughter uh and samatha power they're the
kinds of people who believe these things the sort of obama era un's un officials who are sort of
very concerned about about democracy promotion and finally there are constructivist theories
which suggest that state behavior will define how other states act the most famous expression
from the most famous paper in the constructivist sort of universe is anarchy is what states make
of it so it means that anarchy isn't inherently combative like the realist think an anarchy isn't
inherently sort of the inherently sort of lead to cooperation over time amongst like minded
states like the liberals think it's just sort of it can go either way and so really what we have
is we have a whole discipline whose paradigms when taken together basically explain nothing
because they say well it can be a variety of ways depending on a bunch of circumstances
that are always different it has no explanatory power it's hilarious that that defils and phd's
and this are still getting funded but that's the problem international relations is less of a science
and more of a social club um because they're all of these meta theories have spawned millions of
interpretations of people who are sort of friends with one another who sort of end up advising
various presidents the realists advise the republicans and the liberals advise the democrats
and they all just sort of reinforce that the world use they already have and making them seem
scientific um and they all come from the same sort of very small set of elite schools
and they all publish the same kinds of articles in a very small set of elite journals so i'm talking
about like uh the kennedy school uh london school of economics is a good ir department
columbia it doesn't matter that's it's the usual ones though the usual suspects
and they all sort of jack off into a coffin and a bunch of them are in skull and bones and all
this that and the other and they're incredibly elitist but this gives them this ridiculously
blinkered view of global politics because their their status as the establishment of
sort of vaunted ir theory is basically really just comes down to um be just comes down to
using scientific language to justify your party's policies and being sort of a generally good
dinner party conversationalist or being able to win any pub quiz round when it comes to the
the politics section you know and further just prepares you for a job in the diplomatic core
where you kind of have a sort of priesthood language to talk to your counterparts in other
countries you know you can reference the same the same articles that you all read in foreign
policy and it of course it should be of no surprise to anyone that marxism is completely
sidelined in this whole this whole this whole field of study and i think i think that's for two
reasons the one usual one is that sort of marxism is often sort of quite sidelined in a lot of
prestigious politics departments just i think they're still afraid of the cold war they're
worried that mccarthy might sort of burst out of his grave and you know do mccarthyism again
like brendan o'neill keeps talking about um but the other issue is that like ir tends to conceive
of the international as this unique sphere that's distinct from the domestic sphere entirely and
it's it's wouldn't it would be weird for a marxist to take that point of view because a marxist would
see these things as sort of put together a marxist would see would not really be interested in
sort of separating out the international as a unique sphere with its own sui generous tendencies
that don't arise or aren't connected to say the domestic relations of production
let's not to say there are no i marxist ir theorists there are plenty of them it's just
they i wouldn't i wouldn't say they've really had a lot of mainstream impact apart from
like the sort of realists and the liberals and even the constructivists have had an example of a
couple as immanuel wallerstein who wrote a book on what he calls world systems theory
which argues basically just like there is a core and periphery of nations whose relationship is
one another similar to that of like a bourgeoisie and working class and then a state so you know the
the core nations you know western europe america canada japan australia whatever whatever whatever
the usual basically have an exploitative relationship with everywhere else and that the
international order kind of arises like the superstructure arises out of an economic base
that's created by capitalism at home so that's that's an example of a marxist ir theory that is
distinctly ir because it applies the marxist principles to the international sphere but
like i said it's not that common again there are some brilliant marxist ir scholars and we can talk
about it all day but i would say it's been pretty ghettoized and has not really been taken seriously
enough in the halls of power and people certainly aren't granted defils and phd's in it like they
are for producing works that are called like you know the the dignity of power hard choices and
genocide prevention and you know whatever so now we get to the paper this paper like i said is called
the end of the transition paradigm it's from the early 2000s and it's about why democracy is not
necessarily a durable condition this is a very odd choice for kami book club i know but that's
because it's festive book club um and and thomas carrother is the author of this book you know like
i said he's a karangida endowment gul with a history of democracy promotion in eighties
latin america it's basically the opposite of the kind of thing i would ordinarily talk about
but looking back on sort of talking about what ir is it's very uncommon i think for a paper
especially one that is sort of quite short and powerful as this one is it's like
12 pages long to really just sort of explode some of the pretensions of this discipline
so i guess you could say this if you wanted to seat this somewhere i'd say this is it's not
really realist it's not really liberal i'd say it's more think of it as a response to liberal
assumptions about democracies and the broader sort of democratic peace study because the democratic
peace study is like well it's basically the democratic peace is like fuki ama you know
the world is democratizing the world is becoming more liberal history is going that way there's
nothing you can do about it and by the way it's over um this is i think you know people have been
saying in 2016 oh history history started again you know it's well carothers have been saying it
since about you know 2003 you know this is someone who has been actually relatively on it again
even though he's evil so let's let's let's let's start the article he opens the article by saying
in the last quarter of the 20th century trends in seven different regions converge to change the
political landscape of the world here are the trends one the fall of right-wing authoritarian
regimes in southern europe in the mid 1970s so this would be like portugal salazar the replacement
of military dictatorships by elected civilian governments across latin america from the late
1970s through the late 1980s again wonder who put those military dictatorships there
three the decline of authoritarian rule in parts of east and south asia starting the
mid 1980s the collapse of communist regimes in eastern europe at the end of the 1980s the
breakup of the soviet union and the establishment of the post soviet republics in 91 and the
decline of one party regimes in many parts of sub-saharan africa in the first half of the 1990s
and a weak but liberalizing trend in some middle eastern countries in the 1990s and we know where
that went this was referred to as the third wave of democratization by samuel huntington a theorist
to you may be familiar with for creating the clash of civilizations thesis which basically said
that islam couldn't permit the west to exist because it was a they hate our freedom basically
so the guy who gave george who sort of you know the og they hate our freedom guy also was that
was this sort of oh there's this wave of democratization by the way yeah samuel huntington
another ghoul harvard guy anyway and so the the sort of the u.s government and the u.s foreign
policy community sort of looked at those seven trends and they said the third wave of democracy
is here we need a an analytical framework to conceptualize and respond to like this what's
going on what is what's generalizable about this even like going back to schiller right
what events can we extract from the stream of history to put together and understand why all
of a sudden everything seems much more democratic so carothers goes on because it was derived
principally from their own interpretations of the patterns of democratic change taking place
but also to a lesser extent from the early works of the emergent academic field of and i shit you
not this is the title transit ology the study of transitions to democracy a again i i really do
hope some of you are shaking your heads right now because it's such an obvious nonsense field
right so democracy promoters extended this model of transition as a universal paradigm
for understanding democratization and it became very ubiquitous in u.s policy circles as a way
of talking about thinking about and designing sort of u.s democracy promoting interventions
in the process of political change around the world now we when we think of u.s democracy
promoting interventions we i think often immediately tend to think of you know the
then painting democracy on a series of bombs and then dropping them a bunch of schools which
is quite often when the u.s says we're promoting democracy that is what they're doing but there
are other demo i you might say pro democracy interventions that these would be undertaken
not by the military but by like us aid to a lesser extent the state department where it would just
be like they would like look at a country and say okay we're going to fund your elections we're going
to we're going to try to set up civil society groups i mean inevitably it was still a tool of
us foreign policy it was still an imperialist endeavor but i think this is what carothers is
talking about mainly is soft imperialism like he is the quite admirably he does recognize
the u the united states his role in sort of creating well anti democracies at least in
in south america he notably doesn't mention iran but never mind so these are the kinds of
things we're talking about these these interventions so many countries he goes on that policy makers
and aid practitioners consist in calling persist in calling transitional are not in transition to
democracy and other democratic transitions that are underway most of them aren't following the
model so what is the model what are the assumptions that define the transition paradigm the first
which is the umbrella for all the others is that any country moving away from dictatorial rule can
be considered a country in transition toward democracy so already like that it's the at base
it's teleological which means it is a process that is based around going to a defined end point
so teleology is something that like you get talked about a lot in in in ancient Greece even
so like Aristotle was a very teleological thinker he would think that okay um an an acorn
contains within it an oak tree its destiny is to become an oak tree the the teleology of the acorn
is to become an oak tree it can go no other it can't become a you know mulberry bush it can't
become a guy it must become an oak tree and so they had this very almost Aristotelian view
of dictatorship as inevitably producing democracy and it doing it in the same way
and that's sort of the second assumption is that democratization tends to unfold in a set
sequence of stages which he referred to as opening breakthrough and consolidation so
what we mean when we talk about opening is this is you know a period of sort of political
liberalization where cracks sort of might appear in the ruling regime they might sort of give
accession to sort of civil society groups to demonstrate in public or whatever the breakthrough
is the collapse of the regime in the emergence of like no democratic system where they a new
government might actually come to power there might be a national election and then the consolidation
is the then building of like the organs of state that create what we might think of as a
functioning democracy right where you know they write a constitution and etc etc etc basically
it's they're becoming more like the united states look at that isn't that lovely
and and related to this core sequence of democratization because they think it always
goes the same way there's a dictator the dictator is inevitably opposed by the people
that people that opposition leads to eventually to a successful breakthrough
and then that leads to a consolidation of a democratic society
and the third assumption and this is I think one of the really important ones that makes the sort
of whole school of transitology a complete sort of a pants on head stupid
a birdbrained point of view which is that they believe that they have this core belief that in
the determinative power of elections and democracy promoters basically like they just are like
it's just elections or democracy and if we can do elections then democracy just sort of happens
you know it's why in afghanistan you know you'll we sort of they're like okay well we need to
make elections in afghanistan but then we find that people just sort of
don't trust the system that they're voting in don't trust the candidates they're voting for
that a lot of the candidates that are being voted for are just local warlords that we've
empowered a lot of people can't vote freely because they're threatened and that a lot of
the people that they vote for just you know work in their own work they just self deal they just
work in their own interest because you know we've turned it into a nrk hellscape right so it's
it's the the determinative power of elections is well you could say as a sort of
if it's your instrumental variable it's dog shit because there are so so many countries
that have elect either have elections that are sham so you know like no hasni mubarak
getting you know 100 of the vote every time wild or elections that yeah might even be functional
but that are are just sort of window dressing on as sort of societies that are fundamentally
non-democratic the fourth assumption and this sort of is related to the third assumption
is that the underlying conditions he writes in transitional countries their economic level
political history institutional legacies ethnic makeup sociocultural traditions and other
structural features will not be major factors near the onset or the outcome of the transition
process so they this is i think a key liberal international relations theory characteristic
which is that i think that these processes in fact it's a key international relations
character theory characteristic because if you're going to think about the international etc
that they that there is just this process that happens at this third level that this international
level of democratization and that it sort of pulls it yanks states up from one state one sort of
state of being as a dictatorship to a democracy right it's like you're a democracy now and that
it just sort and it happens like a science and it happens almost like a law of physics it's like
well countries become democracies and they do them this way and it's much akin to if i was holding
a ball and i dropped the ball well of course the ball always falls the same way because well this
is the ball and that's the earth and gravity pulls the ball towards the earth it's always
going to pull it in the same way because well it's just pulls it down and and the tendency of
and i'm aware this is sort of in between international politics and international relations
but in in in reality the line is always very blurred that the tendency of of international
political studies to sort of really just grasp on to this identity as a science essentially just
means that we we we see a very complex and historically determined unsure sort of product
of the contestation of power which is the transition of a country from one system of government to
another as a sort of fundamentally set down thing that we can just sort of set and forget we just
have to help them have elections and we can just fund it and and then we the dynamism and he says
a remarkable scope of the third wave buried old deterministic and culturally noxious assumptions
about democracy such as that only countries in the american style middle class or a heritage of
protestant individualism could become democratic this was the way of thinking sort of you might
say in the middle of the 20th century and earlier which was a well they're not ready for democracy
is sort of this almost goes back to like john stewart mill who is writing about how well
we can be free in the west but the savages aren't ready to be free so we have to colonize them
this same point of view just never really got challenged even when international relations
was supposedly becoming much more scientific in the middle of the 20th century they just had this
view that basically to be a democracy you needed to be western and co-rothers here sort of does
sort of gives the this sort of school of transitology credit for saying okay well he didn't
actually assume all of this stuff and for policymakers and aid practitioners this was
a new outlook and it was a break from this long-standing cold war mindset that most countries
in the developing world just weren't ready for democracy which again and again co-rothers the
reason i want to read this paper is that co-rothers is so honest about this sort of just of saying
talking about the the u.s.'s relationship with the idea of democracy promotion around the world
he says this mindset dovetailed with us policies of propping up anti-communist dictators around
the world so for both the scholarly and policy communities this new no precondition so you don't
need to not be ready for democracy to get ready for democracy outlook was gratifyingly optimistic
and sort of liberated them from their old frankly you know racist imperialist assumptions even
though it gave way to new forms of racism and imperialism as we all know but that's it so we
went for a view that democracy was specifically anti-communist to a view of democracy that was
vague poorly defined and based in blanket assumptions about the importance of voting
and so that's sort of the fourth assumption which is i think the most interesting one
and finally the is the assumption that i think is related to the fourth which is that the transition
paradigm rests on the assumption that the democratic institutions that are making up this
third wave are being built in coherent functioning states and so that basically just i'll go back
to the subject the example of afghanistan afghanistan has historically been a very difficult
state to govern if you're at all interested in it i my favorite book on the country is by a guy
called thomas barfield and it's just called afghanistan but you know afghanistan is without
going into too much detail it's it's it it has been governed more in the style of sort of persian
satrapies where a central a central a central leader usually from one of two pashto tribes
pashtun tribes would consult would consolidate power through sort of delegation and negotiation
with the regions it was a functioning society but it wasn't a west phalion state as we might know it
west phalion state is the state as defined by the treaty of west phalia which is the
area in which one ruler has sort of sovereignty and can conduct the conduct the conduct of others
so they can create laws and so on so that's it was a treaty in europe that sort of gave us our
modern idea of what a state is so our idea of what a state is then is european and our idea of
what democracy is is sort of european our international relations assumptions were
sort of quite european and we just assumed that there'd be functioning states elsewhere
is that afghanistan was never a functioning state in the west phalion sense it was a
functioning society but it was much more sort of negotiated but it has taken sort of so many
different forms of having a functioning society that were nothing like a west phalion state
so for example the afghan empire under akhmad shah dorani in the 18th century
was sort of much more about sort of receiving fealty and extracting tribute whereas
abdo rachman's rule in the 19th century was much more like a sort of series of military
despotism where he basically killed everyone and displaced the entire hasara population
so like it's afghanistan has been both of those things within the space of a hundred years of
one another based on different styles of ruling that were not necessarily these
west phalion ones and so the assumption of the transition paradigm that the
societies it was going to be sort of converting to democracy naturally just had these west phalion
states they were natural sort of failed to take into account that the sort of export export of
the west phalion state around the world was a relatively recent invention and it's not to say
that these other societies aren't capable of having a west phalion state i mean you know i think a
west phalion state might have slotted on to abdo rachman's government quite well you know and
west phalion states have sort of in different modes slid on to on to certain sort of post-colonial
countries sort of more effectively or less effectively or what have you i think it's the
assumption that this is the natural mode of sort of human society is one that just has
completely bitten you might call western democracy promoters in the ass sort of repeatedly and it
just made them look really really stupid in public a lot so for others sort of says okay those are
the assumptions so taken together he says the political trajectories of most third wave countries
calling to serious doubt the transition paradigm that this is apparent if we revisit the major
assumptions underlying the paradigm in light of the fact that well quite simply countries have
either devolved into what he called feckless pluralism which was yes there are free and open
elections but they're largely elite affairs that you know aren't really connected to anyone's
day-to-day experiences it's oh yeah we have a million different parties but you it's it's not
really it's it's still a very despotic almost mode of of politics even if there is this sort of
facade of democracy over it and then you also have what he calls dominant power politics where
it's there is one political grouping whether it's a movement a party an extended family or a
single leader sort of dominates the system in such a way that there appears to be little
alteration of power in the foreseeable future but realistically like whether we're talking about
sort of what he calls feckless pluralism or dominant power politics in both cases the state
is not an effective deliverer of people's sort of day-to-day needs you know he says that that so
for example the problem in is is often bureaucracy decaying under the stagnancy of a de facto one
party rule in a dominant power society whereas in sort of a feckless pluralist society you
actually have a disorganized unstable state so someone that might have like constant turnover
of ministers you know and so it's it in both in both cases sort of you might have democracy but
you have very little governance and you know he goes through sort of where these different
where these different modes obtain I mean I don't think it's as interesting to go through them
just because well most of the countries that he might be citing they've changed sort of multiple
times over and over again but so we might look at something like the Philippines with Duterte
you know it was it has it has become what you might say is a very much a dominant power politics
system whereas in somewhere like you know like Lebanon you might say we've got feckless pluralism
but that's also not to say that sort of western more developed country not more developed western
countries sort of aren't sort of prone to this as well I mean what it how would we characterize
the United States I mean you know the state certainly isn't delivering what people need
but one thing I think Carothers didn't expect because the notable thing about the
about the the countries that he cites or that they're all sort of post-colonial they're all
transition they're all sort of former Soviet whatever whatever whatever whatever
but he sort of leaves out the west well of course he does because he thinks that the west is what
the model is and that all these countries will sort of well that the theory says all these
countries will naturally emulate the model and he says well no they won't but what he didn't
expect was that the model would break down so I mean you can sort of think about thinking about
sort of dominant power politics or feckless pluralism you can apply that to the United States
after the recent midterms where in state houses and state legislatures across across the country
you know ousted republicans are now you know are now radically curtailing the powers of the
of the newly elected democrats sort of before they you know leave office in January and yeah
maybe it'll get challenged by the courts but like or but the fact is you know laws and norms of
sort of traditional participatory democracy are just becoming less and less
valid or less and less powerful in the United States so you know it's it's not just the transition
paradigm that we can that we we have to discard when we read Carothers but it's we can say oh well
this is this is happening to us too the the idea that sort of democracy is just a place you get to
it's like well we have democracy or at the end of the game we're done playing now as opposed to a
process as opposed to something that you look to extend and deepen as opposed to something that
you sort of do and fight for because you know it's if your democracy is important and I mean
look we we tend to sort of talk about democracy and economic terms on this podcast because well
of course fucking marxist and so and we sort of had no intuitively that sort of these things
need to be pushed for but I think it's important to remember that sort of these political rights
whatever they are you know they are being eroded from the right and that we cannot imagine that our
own democracy is safe or stable in the face of all of these all of these erosions right so back
to Carothers he says the various assumed component processes of consolidations such as political
party development civil society strengthening traditional reform and media development almost
never conformed to the technocratic ideal of rational sequences on which the indicator frameworks
and strategic objectives of democracy promoters are built instead they are chaotic processes of
change that go backwards and sideways as much as forward and not do so in any regular manner and
I mean I feel like this comes to the heart of why sort of international relations
or the desire to do politics as a science is a sort of a doomed a doomed ambition
now I don't mean that you can't be say a scientific socialist I don't mean that you can't say sort
of well we are going to we are going to understand sort of like where wealth goes we're going to
understand sort of what the effects of inequality are we're going to sort of hold these things as
true but rather to sort of take these contingent sort of complex power related processes I say
power related like I'm going to say us interest related processes and dress them up in the language
of science at least sort of having these theories of democracy promotion or whatever
that it's just it it has no explanatory value because you know they are chaotic processes
of change that sort of go backwards and sideways just as much as forward and not in any regular
manner and so what's the point of trying to create a theory where it says well here are the steps
and here are the and here are the indicators and you know when you pass 60 on the on the freedom
house scale you have freedom you have a democracy that doesn't make any kind of sense
and so you know it it's sort of it sort of rips back the cloak a little bit on saying that
well really what we're doing here is we're trying to say that the world is the United States
and to a lesser extent Britain well I mean to as great an extent but well Britain matters less
the way these countries see the world is natural and the way that other countries are
is naturally underdeveloped and so the whole thing just exists as this cover for imperialism
anyway let's go on so he says you know in many of these transitional countries
regular genuine elections are held but political participation beyond voting remains shallow and
governmental accountability is weak now what this reminds me of completely is I think a lot
of the ways in which liberals think we have to defend our democracies here in the and the
this sort of atlanticist world you know it's um they say well get out there and vote vote vote
you know we're gonna I'm gonna queue up at that starbucks and I'm gonna make you write go vote
on my cup and I'm gonna ask you if you voted I'm gonna yell at you if you didn't and I'm gonna
march on parliament I'm gonna ask them to please do the thing that I've asked for because I voted
for you and they think they do that there is this liberal idea that that democracy equals
elections voting equals democracy it's the most you can do is vote and if you sort of try to
advance any kind of interest beyond that if you try to make the state work for you then well
you're not doing democracy you're getting in the way of democracy we need to leave it to the
technocrats we need to leave it to the experts but I think as thomas carothers is showing those
experts are just sort of constantly and embarrassingly wrong all the time about more or less
everything anyway so let's go on so he says the wide gulf between political elites and citizens
in many of these countries turns it to be rooted in structural conditions such as concentration
of wealth or certain sociocultural additions traditions that elections themselves do not
overcome I credit the the latter part less I mean you know america has got a sociocultural
America in the uk have some pretty fucking anti-democratic sociocultural traditions
and yet he still seems fine calling us a robust democracy but I really want to point to that
first one he says the wide gulf between political elites and citizens in many of these countries
turns it to be rooted in structural conditions such as the concentration of wealth interesting
as robust democracy requires robust economic equality he's actually kind of recognizing
he's forced to recognize when reckoning with the failure of his colleagues ability to sort of
do politics as a science i would sort of do politics as a science without power just looking
at it in the abstract of like oh well it power doesn't matter because country is naturally
transitioned from dictatorship to democracy blah blah blah like no it's you need to have
these things like um like sort of robust economic equality or as we might call it economic democratization
or else the states probably not going to work for people i mean the states working for fewer and
fewer people as inequality has gotten worse and worse in the us and uk i mean i think these things
are not at all unconnected so let's carry on ever since the preconditions for democracy were
enthusiastically banished in the heady days of the earth of the third wave a contrary reality
the fact that various structural conditions clearly weigh heavily in shaping political outcomes has
been working its way back in looking at the more successful recent cases of democratization for
example which tend to be found in central europe the southern cone this is what they call set latin
america i don't know why or east asia it is clear that relative economic wealth as well as past
experience of the political pluralism contributes for the to the chances for democratic success
now again i i think that what he's sort of forgetting is um is sort of is american
promotion of its own interests you know i mean they were still not they're still not even keen now
on um amlo in mexico you know there's the the economist already has written oh will he go
too far maybe there should be a coup etc etc etc but you know there will i'd say also we have to
say the us is willing to sort of promote and strengthen democracies where it's in its interest
to do so but yeah and the relative economic wealth i think is a cover for a significant
import export partner with the us you know um it make this country if we go back to
immanuel wallerstein we can say you know it's well yeah they have relative wealth
and they can sort of have sort of more political pluralism because you know they are they've gone
from peripheral nations to core nations you know japan was a peripheral nation until it had its
economic miracle in the 1980s um you know it's uh the the asian tigers you know all this stuff
is japan south korea singapore hong kong anyway um and he's but he he goes on that we know within
regions whether it's in the former communist world of sub-zohar in africa it is evident that the
specific institutional legacies from predecessor regimes strongly affect the outcomes of attempted
transitions in which you know again thomas carothers accidentally does dialectics you know of course the
the nature of the previous situation will define sort of certain elements of the subsequent situation
it's interesting that as a lot of these um sort of really relatively pompous
ir types sort of begin to question their own um sort of so-called scientific so scientific style
theories they sort of begin to get little tiny bits of marxism just sort of drifting in
so looking at sort of all democrat democracy all it turns out you need you need to actually
have economic democratization and apparently there's a thesis and antithesis thing going on
with the formation of new social structures oh my goodness did we just invent historical
materialism i'm sure liberals would actually think that anyway so he's saying like where state
building from scratch had to be carried out the core impulses and interests of the power holders
and this is a bit of a long read but i think it's worth it so just locking in access to power and
resources as quickly as possible ran directly contrary to what democracy building would have
required in countries with existing but extremely weak states the democracy building efforts funded
by donors usually neglected the issue of state building with their frequent emphasis on diffusing
power and weakening the relative power of the executive branch by strengthening the legislative
and judi judicial branches of government and secondly um also by privatizing a bunch of
shit and sort of thinking of democracy as operate as sort of running on the free market
you know you end up with sort of just fire sales of state assets you know any sort i'll go back to it
and encouraging decentralization so that's decentralization he's just getting carothers
doesn't mention it in building civil society they were more about the redistribution of state power
than about state building the programs that democracy promoters have directed at governance
have tended to be minor technocratic efforts such as training ministerial staff for aiding
cabinet offices rather than major efforts at bolstering state capacity now when we think of
bolstering state capacity i mean i believe we've tried to do that quite a bit i mean personally
i think the best way to bolster state capacity is a mass redistribution of resources again carothers
probably doesn't credit that idea um in fact this is sort of where carothers paper which i think has
been brutally honest about um what democracy promotion is and what you how it has dovetailed
with us foreign policy interests and why it's impossible to view with some kind of natural
process um it sort of tapers out here where he doesn't he doesn't really know what it means
i think to sort of radically bolster state capacity because if you're a carnegie guy working in
democracy promotion in south america in the 1980s are you really you really want to bolster
state capacity that much you know if you're looking at a country that's got that's do i
engage in an experiment of sort of a radical economic democratization like venezuela are you
really trying to bolster that state's capacity are you really trying to bolster cuba's capacity
like you never stop being an american foreign policy spook um you know even if you are working for
one of the ghoul um addendum institutions like carnegie so you know i i don't really sort of
credit him much there but i'm not that interested in what thomas carothers thinks of as sort of
bolstering state capacity in a real way i'm much more interested in what carothers has done here
as a kind of active truth telling that is so very very very very rare
in in international relations or international policy or foreign policy literature
it's usually very sort of blinkered lee pro western it sort of has pretensions to science
that just make it seem ridiculous and it it tends to be written sort of by and for practitioners
who just love smelling their own farts this is a rare example of a paper that isn't that
and i think it's a for me anyway it's a really interesting look into the ways in which america
sees its role in the world and and the ways in which sort of this discipline sort of has shaped
um many people's lived experiences because it allows the dumbass theories of you know dipshit
rich kids who went to harvard um to actually then go and shape policy and us policy towards
countries that might be in sort of moments of you know um political turmoil anyway so that's
a very that's a new kind of commie of commie book club it's why it's the festive book club
because this wasn't certainly not a commie book it was neither commie or a book
but i do hope you enjoyed this introduction to sort of what this discipline is and does
and and this sort of one moment of accidental honesty that sort of came out of its it's
reckoning with itself in the aftermath of 9 11 and the aftermath of sort of
that sort of moment of unipolarity in the 1990s you know if you have any questions but
usually i don't encourage people to be kept you have any questions if you do have any questions
i actually like talking about this stuff so do let me know my dms are open um otherwise you know
thank you as as ever for listening if you're listening to this on the day's release thank
you for being a patreon subscriber if you're listening to this when it gets unlocked next
month consider becoming a patreon subscriber i wonder how brexit will have gone um dear
future riley i hope brexit's gone very well anyway our theme song as ever is here we go
by jin saying you can find it on spotify and as ever you can commodify your descent with a t-shirt
from little com rap perhaps you'd like to get one of the five core assumptions of the transition
paradigm on on a t-shirt from ed you could really confuse the shit out of her and wouldn't that be
fun for all of us anyway this has been another riley solo episode finished and signing off good night