Build that State!
DEVELOPMENT!
DEVELOPMENT!
DEVELOPMENT!
Comparative Politics
Democracy & Backsliding
Authoritarianism
100

Of the three primary political units (state, regime, government), this one is the least likely to change.

State

100

A set of 10 economic policy recommendations for developing countries promoted by Washington-based institutions like the IMF and World Bank.  Promoted free-market reform.

The Washington Consensus

100

A research problem where the researcher cannot discern whether X causes Y, or Y causes X.

Endogeneity / reverse causality

100

Dahl's ideal form of government in which power is invested in multiple people. There is high contestation and high inclusion.

Polyarchy

100

The most fragile type of authoritarian regime.

Personalistic dictatorship

200

What a state attempts to do.

State scope.

200

This theory argues that the development of wealthy countries has disadvantaged less developed countries. Core countries attained success by preying upon peripheral countries. To achieve development, the periphery must break away from the core and develop internally

Dependency Theory

200

A condition that guarantees an event will occur, but it might not be the only way for the event to happen

A sufficient condition (compare to a necessary condition)

200

A regime featuring a coexistence of meaningful democratic institutions and serious incumbent abuse, yielding electoral competition that is real but unfair.

Competitive authoritarianism (a type of hybrid regime)

200

The problem a dictator faces in maintaining their rule while satisfying the elites with whom they must share power.

The problem of authoritarian power sharing (compare to the problem of authoritarian control)

300

This theory argues that war-making and state-making are interdependent. Wars are seen as a great stimulus to centralizing state power and building institutional capacity

The Bellicist model of state building (Tilly, "War made the state and the state made war")

300

A state that manipulates and guides economic policy to achieve economic development (usually in a short period of time)

Developmental State

300

This relationship can only be proved with an experiment 

Causation or a causal relationship (compare to correlation)

300

The process by which a new democracy matures, in a way that it becomes unlikely to revert to authoritarianism without an external shock, and is regarded as "the only game in town" within a country

Democratic consolidation (compare to democratic transition)

300

This allows authoritarians to improve governance through consultation with citizens while developing a supervision structure to better control these citizens.

Consultatative authoritarianism

400

This author argues that African states will likely not consolidate without interstate war.  

Herbst

400

An economic policy stemming from dependency theory.  To develop, the periphery must break away from the core and industrialize internally.

Import-Substituting Industrialization (ISI) (compare to EOI)

400

This method states that if a phenomenon occurs in one situation but not in another, and the only difference between the two is the presence or absence of a single factor, then that factor is the cause.

Mill's Method of Difference

400

A wave of states that transitioned towards democracy in the mid 1970s. This wave was different from others because of these states were NOT Protestant, were NOT economically developed, WERE plagued by social and ethnic divisions, and had weak leadership

Third Wave of Democracy

400

A conflict faced by autocrats wherein their repression of popular preferences helps keep them in power but simultaneously prevents them from knowing their true level of support

Dictator's Dilemma

500

An area in an otherwise strong state where the state fails to meet the needs of its citizens

Brown area

500

A religious practice of self-denial, self-discipline, and abstinence from worldly desires to achieve spiritual goals. Weber argues that this element of Protestantism is the foundation of the Protestant work ethic, making Protestantism highly compatible with capitalism

Ascetic work

500

A "nonsense correlation" between two variables that appears causal but is actually due to something else or coincidence, creating a misleading connection.

Spuriousness

500

A mode of democratic transition where moderate members of a weakened authoritarian regime negotiate the conditions of a transition with moderate leaders of a pro-democracy movement. These transitions tend to occur relatively rapidly and result in power-sharing arrangements that preserve elements of the old authoritarian regime

Pacted transition

500

The act of misrepresenting one's true opinion, usually from fear of a negative repercussion.  

Preference falsification.