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Full Description
This provocative and timely book, challenges conventional wisdom about political legitimacy. While democratic social contracts are traditionally viewed as the only legitimate form of governance, it reveals how authoritarian states maintain stability and popular support without relying solely on repression.
The author dissects the 'authoritarian social contract' —a tacit agreement between rulers and citizens based not on political participation but on the delivery of three critical benefits: social mobility and prosperity, safety and security, and a sphere of negative freedom outside the political realm, to show that when these benefits are successfully provided, authoritarian regimes can achieve remarkable stability and genuine popular support. He also demonstrates how democracies worldwide are experiencing legitimacy crises precisely because they are failing to deliver these same fundamental benefits. As democratic nations witness declining social mobility, security challenges, and paradoxically, increasing state interference in personal freedoms, they face the same expressions of grievance and anti-regime activism historically seen in failing authoritarian states and risk the same fate that befell such regimes in the late 1980s and early 1990s.
This volume is essential reading for political scientists, policymakers, and anyone concerned with the future of democratic governance.
Contents
Introduction Chapter 1: Making Sense of the Authoritarian Social Contract Chapter 2: Putin's Social Contract: Foundations and Challenges Chapter 3: The Highs and Lows of the Democratic Social Contract Conclusion Index



