• Keine Ergebnisse gefunden

Liberal democracy as universal value

N/A
N/A
Protected

Academic year: 2022

Aktie "Liberal democracy as universal value"

Copied!
3
0
0

Wird geladen.... (Jetzt Volltext ansehen)

Volltext

(1)

Liberal democracy as universal value

By Jörg Faust,

German Development Institute /

Deutsches Institut für Entwicklungspolitik (DIE)

of 14 January 2013

(2)

Liberal democracy as universal value

Bonn, 14 January 2013. Public sovereignty is often seen as the fundamental idea of democracy. In liberal democracy this central idea finds expression in the fact that inclusive participatory rights of all citizens permit contestation for the legislature or executive. Those who govern are thus bound by the preferences of encompassing majorities. Free and fair elections, the freedom of assembly, asso- ciation, the press as well as the protection of fun- damental rights are institutional principles that characterise democratic systems today. After the end of the Cold War, these principles seemed to become accepted as a canon of universal values of legitimate rule.

Two decades after the fall of the Berlin Wall, how- ever, this universality is coming in for growing criticism on the ground that western ideas of de- mocracy do not “travel very well” to other cultural environments. As, according to the critics, the emergence of liberal democracy is a product of specifically western experience, the integration of liberal-democratic moral concepts into other cul- tural contexts is severely restricted. The democ- ratic principles mentioned above would therefore be in no way suitable as a canon of universal val- ues, their range being limited by cultural or cul- tural-religious boundaries. As deeply embedded Asian and African politico-cultural concepts and practices, for example, are compatible with liberal- democratic concepts to only a limited extent at best, western measures to promote liberal democ- racy should be considered illegitimate and unfruit- ful. This line of argument is also reinforced by the current global changes – the rise of emerging powers and the manifest economic problems in Europe and the USA.

On closer examination, however, there is a great deal to be said for the universality of liberal-

democratic values and little for culturally relativis- tic scepticism.

The principles of liberal-democratic rule continue to radiate with enormous intensity in all cultural circles. And this by no means solely because west- ern prosperity and consumption are associated with democracy. Moreover the institutional prin- ciples of liberal democracy are linked to the well- justified hope that under democratic order gov- ernment are not confined to the interests of a few powerful groups, but is geared to the needs of broad strata of society. This is not only evident from the events of the Arab Spring, when large sections of the population stood up for greater political participation and democracy. At least Muslims of the urban middle classes have little interest in Islamist authoritarianism. It is no differ- ent in South Korea, Taiwan, Indonesia, Ghana or South Africa, where the institutional principles of democracy have been established and are en- dorsed by a majority of the population. Con- versely, authoritarian regimes invest hugely in censorship and repression in all cultural circles with a view to preventing an open debate on the legitimacy of different forms of political order.

This does not mean that the institutions of liberal democracy will be established quickly and without conflict. For so optimistic a forecast the inertia of the political and economic elites who benefit handsomely from illiberal and autocratic struc- tures is just too strong. Yet, the experience of the last decades just does not lend support to the thesis that the attractiveness of liberal-democratic principles is reserved to certain large cultural areas.

It would be a cynical undertaking to declare to today’s Indian demonstrators that, although fun- damental rights of girls and women must be guaranteed by the state, freedom of assembly and

© German Development Institute / Deutsches Institut für Entwicklungspolitik (DIE) The Current Column, 14 January 2013

www.die-gdi.de | www.facebook.com/DIE.Bonn | https://plus.google.com/

(3)

© German Development Institute / Deutsches Institut für Entwicklungspolitik (DIE) The Current Column, 14 January 2013

www.die-gdi.de | www.facebook.com/DIE.Bonn | https://plus.google.com/

demands for parliament and government to be more accountable are culturally illegitimate means of achieving that end. Similarly, it would be con- temptuous to tell Chinese bloggers as Michael Anti that they are wrong in describing democracy as a “universal value” or to advice civil society ac- tors in Africa that the democratically legitimised rule of law for which they are pressing is a cultur- ally uninformed expectation.

The charge laid by culturally relativistic sceptics that the concept of liberal democracy as a canon of universal values is a fixed component of west- ern “value imperialism” can even be reversed in many cases. For what right do western cultural relativists have to claim that societies in other regions are culturally unfit for democratic rule?

The reference to intellectual opponents of liberal- democratic principles in the countries of the South is, in any case, worth little, since they often prove on closer inspection to be the victims of censor- ship or even beneficiaries of authoritarian struc- tures.

The core of the culturally relativistic argument that liberal democracy does not travel well is, then, neither empirically tenable nor normatively comprehensible. However, overly optimistic fore- casts of the irreversible triumphant arrival of lib- eral democracy should also be viewed with cau- tion. The barriers to greater democracy are rooted less in the universal attractiveness of liberal de- mocracy than in the fact that inclusive rights to participation and freedom constitute a threat to the political and economic beneficiaries of au- thoritarian structures.

Finally, acceptance of the universality of the con- cepts of liberal democracy does not mean that criticism may not be levelled at the practices and conduct of western democracy promotion. Dip- lomatic deviousness and the often patronising self-satisfaction of western democracy promoters are often of little help to gain acceptance for de- mocracy as a universal value in a changing interna- tional system.

Dr. Jörg Faust Deutsches Institut für Entwicklungspolitik (DIE)

Referenzen

ÄHNLICHE DOKUMENTE

h) [the proclamation clause] Now, Therefore THE GENERAL ASSEMBLY proclaims THIS UNIVERSAL DECLARATION OF HUMAN RIGHTS as a common standard of achievement for all peoples and

In other words, the chapter examines the degree to which economic development (and the broad sets of social changes that it entails), the interplay of power politics

Moreover, in what has been termed “l’univers talpologique de Franz Kafka,” the figure of the mole is shown to be involved in the construction of an elaborate labyrinthine

We talk about the West, or we’re in a multi-polar world now, so that may be not quite the right phrase but I think if we look at India, South Africa, Brazil, there are lots of issues

According to the most recent version the overall quality of democracy has eroded throughout the developing world, whereas the key components of functioning democracies have

For those of you who are unfamiliar with the Red Book, it was the document with the bright red cover that was officially titled Creating Opportunity: The Liberal Plan for Canada

La idea de una cooperaci´on que garantice el mutuo beneficio para todos implica establecer que la cooperaci´on ser´a un derecho s´olo si implica eficiencia o si ambas partes

De este modo, los DESC y la teor´ıa econ´omica se contraponen: por un lado los DESC obligan a los Estados a garantizar el disfute de determinados bienes, frente a la teor´ıa