Publications /
Opinion

Back
Navigating Democracy’s Structural Uncertainty
Authors
Camila Crescimbeni
January 30, 2024

Camila Crescimbeni is a 2023 alumna of Atlantic Dialogues Emerging Leaders program. Learn more about her here.

Following a fruitful and broad debate at the 2023 Atlantic Dialogues, Alec Russell, foreign editor of the Financial Times, asked a deep and globally-relevant question: Can democracy survive 2024? With 70 states having elections this year, it is a fundamental question. After some decades of continuous expansion of democracy worldwide, as shown by the V-Dem Electoral Democracy Index, there now seems to be a downturn. Is this a surprising trend or is there an underlying risk in all democratic societies?

PCNS

 

V-Dem electoral democracy index as portrayed in Alec Russell’s article ‘Can Democracy survive 2024?’ https://www.ft.com/content/077e28d8-3e3b-4aa7-a155-2205c11e826f

A visionary on the uncertain path of democracy, French philosopher Claude Lefort argued that inherent to democracy’s design      is its own antidemocratic demon: uncertainty. After the fall of absolute regimes in the West and, with them, the belief in a transcendent fundament[1] of the political order, societies began looking for a new foundation. With the rise of liberal democracies, the foundation of society became immanent instead of transcendent: God was no longer the reason and end behind everything, it was common people who had to bear the responsibility of everything that went right or wrong. It was the dawn of Illuminism and Modernity, with much hope in anthropocentrism.

But the nature of democracy itself has its Dr Jekyll and Mr Hyde, Lefort reflected, since the lack of an absolute foundation can make people scared of uncertainty and instability, and lure them into cherishing a stronger and more predictable way of things. Lefort called this “the phantom of People-One”  (in French, le people-Un), a concept he took from Etienne de la Boétie, whereby he referred to the desire he identified within human beings to have an ultimate and irrefutable foundation on which to blame all wrongs and where to find all rights. Living in a democratic society, for Lefort, entails developing a joy, or at least a tolerance, for uncertainty, dynamism, and instability. No one is the owner of the place of power, no one is the State à la Louis XIV, no one can claim to hold together the fabric of society. We only have temporary occupants of power who always represent part of it, but those occupants are not society. Absolute representation is just an oxymoron.

In this sense, we have to be able to train our people for the kind of system we all chose as the best available. For democracies to work and prosper, open societies are needed rather than closed societies; people should enjoy and celebrate diversity and not resent it; children and young people must be able to believe they can prosper despite, or rather through, dynamism. However, the wave seems to be going the opposite way, and this harms democracies and people’s expectations of how democracy can bring about development, not generally speaking, but for them. We are growing scared of each other, seeing our fellow citizens as potential competitors or rivals, and not finding a significantly happy reason to live together. We are looking for institutions or leaders or devices that promise fast and easy and absolute truths, relieving our fear of constant change. Many don’t find their place in society now, not even as an expectation that after a certain pathway of hard work and effort they will belong, and this has placed an underlying strain on the way we thought democracies would continue to spread.

Hopefully 2024 will bring about discussions in the 70 states holding elections and elsewhere, through which we can focus not so much on being right but on being helpful, to move towards a happier, more tolerant, and fairer world order.

PCNS

[1] According to Lefort (and many post foundationalists), a transcendent fundament is the opposite of an immanent fundament. A transcendent fundament of society is outside society itself (e.g., God), and no one can challenge it. On the contrary, an immanent fundament refers to the origin and basis of society as coming from within society itself.

 

RELATED CONTENT

  • Authors
    Sous la direction de
    September 3, 2020
    Au moment où elle fêtait le passage à 2020, l’Afrique était loin de soupçonner que l’année à laquelle elle faisait ses adieux, aurait le funeste “privilège” de porter dans ses registres d’Etat-civil, la naissance d’un virus qui allait paralyser le monde, dans la première moitié de l’année suivante. C’est sur cette Afrique de l’année pré-Covid-19 que portent les différents papiers du présent Rapport. Les uns, reflétant les espoirs, les ambitions et les projets africains et, les autre ...
  • Authors
    Taoufik Marrakchi
    September 2, 2020
    The crisis of the new Coronavirus is exacerbating the tensions between the United States and China, thus foreshadowing a war without guns, in which the stakes are neither territorial nor ideological, but economic. Having adopted a vehement attitude towards China, well before this crisis, the tenant of the White House has brandished the threat of economic sanctions against China and is pushing towards its isolation on the international scene in order to contain its influence. In cont ...
  • Authors
    August 3, 2020
    It was notthe way you would expect a scientist to be celebrated. InStyle, an American fashion magazine showed on its cover Anthony Fauci, America’s frontline warrior against the COVID-19 virus. Fauci has been director of the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases since 1984, and has been honored by presidents since Ronald Reagan, battling against HIV/Aids, SARS, swine flu, MERS, and Ebola. He is, BBC News stated, “the face of America’s fight against COVID-19”. The vir ...
  • July 15, 2020
    في فبراير 2020 نشر كاتب هذه الأوراق مؤلفه حول موضوع «نحن و العولمة » حيث تساءل عن جواب الجنوب اتجاه التحولات الكبرى التي تعرفها هذه الأخيرة 1. تعبر الكلمات المفاتيح لهذه الأوراق )الهشاشة، التشظي، اللايقين، غير المتوقع، الهلع، السمعة، الصحة، البيئة، التكافؤ، الأقلمة، استعادة التموقع، الإختبار، الفرص(، عن المشاعر الشائعة عالميا خال شهور الحجر الصحي الذي فرضته جائحة كفيد 19 و ما نتج عنها من انكماش كبير للإقتصاد. عرف العالم مند بداية القرن ثاث هزات هائلة : الأولى جيوسياسية ) 11 شتنبر 20 ...
  • Authors
    Abdessalam Jaldi
    June 26, 2020
    La jeune démocratie tunisienne a réussi le double pari de juguler la propagation de la pandémie de la Covid-19, tout en s’érigeant en un modèle régional de gestion de la crise sanitaire. Désormais, le pays doit remédier aux chocs économiques engendrés par la pandémie et pourrait connaitre la pire récession de son histoire. Dans cette tempête annoncée, l’accélération de la transition économique s’avère nécessaire, non seulement pour refonder le système économique, mais aussi pour pré ...
  • June 22, 2020
    إن حسن تدبير فترات الاختبارات و المحن و الأزمات كان دوما مصدر السمعة الطيبة دوليا للكيانات الوطنية. إذ أن هذه الأخيرة توظفها في التأقلم مع التحولات التي تتولد عن هذه الفترات الحرجة و تساعدها على المساهمة في كتابة المستقبل. هكذا تمكنت الأقطار انطلاقا من اكتسابها سمعة طيبة في اللحظات الحرجة للعلاقات الدولية و لتطور العولمة، من ترسيخ اشعاعها عالميا و اقليميا و التأثير على تطور الإنسانية، فسمعة البلاد في الفترات الحرجة تعكس مدى فعالية و جودة حكامتها الداخلية; وهي في ذات الوقت عامل فاعل ...
  • Authors
    Moulay Omar Mharzi
    June 19, 2020
    À l’heure actuelle, l’humanité baigne dans une crise profonde dont la portée est universelle. Le constat est sans appel : la pandémie Covid-19 a enclenché une panique immense impliquant l’ordre social, les structures économiques et politiques, pour ne citer que ces aspects. S’agissant du volet politique, il est évident que les incidences de cette pandémie traversent aisément les frontières. En ce sens, une question se pose immanquablement : quel est l’impact de la crise sanitaire su ...
  • Authors
    Hamza M'Jahed
    May 30, 2020
    */ - Le Coronavirus menace d’affaiblir l’autorité de l’État et la mise en place d’un cadre constructif pour l'organisation des élections dans des conditions sereines ; - Étant donné que la Chine est un partenaire économique primordial en Afrique de l’Ouest, l’impact du Coronavirus s’est d’ores et déjà soldé par une baisse des flux de capitaux chinois et par un retard dans la réalisation de mégaprojets d’infrastructures ; - Suite à un ralentissement des échanges commerciaux des Ét ...
  • Authors
    May 22, 2020
    This paper takes a comparative look at Sudan, Morocco, and Algeria, at the rise of Nubian and Amazigh rights groups, and their attempts to redefine national identity. We examine: 1/ how Nubian rights groups have sparked what is being called a Kushite revival in Sudan, and are pushing for a change in educational policy and archaeological practice to engender a new historiography and national narrative; 2/ how Amazigh movements in Morocco and Algeria are similarly trying to expand con ...
  • Authors
    May 21, 2020
    Tous les pays du monde sont touchés, à différentes échelles, par la pandémie du Covid-19. Les interrogations autour du degré de résilience des Etats africains sont nombreuses et les questionnements sur l’avenir du continent, si la pandémie venait à perdurer dans le temps, le sont tout autant. Comment des Etats peu dotés en moyens sanitaires pourront-ils y faire face ? Y a-t-il un risque de violence dans certains pays où le degré de stabilité politique est faible ? Et, enfin, qu’advi ...