Ignorer la navigation
An Era of Authoritarian Influence?
Article

An Era of Authoritarian Influence?

How Democracies Should Respond


résumé audio créé automatiquement
résumé audio créé automatiquement

Editorial Rating

8

Qualities

  • Eye Opening
  • Background

Recommendation

When the Soviet Union collapsed, many celebrated the triumph of Western liberal democracy. As political scientist Francis Fukuyama argued in his daringly titled essay, “The End of History?” in 1989, no other form of governance could possibly rival the Western model. Less than three decades later, however, democratic ideals around the world are under assault. As Thorsten Benner explains in Foreign Affairs, newly emboldened authoritarian regimes are taking advantage of Western democracies’ open economies and internal political divisions to nudge them toward illiberalism. In a concise analysis outlining the motivations and influencing tactics of totalitarian governments, Benner offers a series of recommendations on how democracies can inoculate themselves from these attacks.

Take-Aways

  • Authoritarian regimes such as those of Russia and China are trying to influence Western democracies through information campaigns, political party financing and investments in strategic economic sectors.
  • By prodding other countries toward illiberalism, authoritarian states seek to quell Western initiatives to promote democratic values and a free international order around the world.
  • Russia, seeking to enhance its geopolitical standing, uses influencing campaigns to expand its sphere of interest.

About the Author

Thorsten Benner is director of the Global Public Policy Institute in Berlin.


More on this topic

Related Channels