Lecture of Filip Milačić at CEU Democracy Institute
Interested in how political actors undermine democracy in the name of the nation? On the event on Monday, 21 February (4:30-6 pm), organized by The De- and Re-Democratization Workgroup of the CEU Democracy Institute and the CEU Nationalism Studies Program, our Filip Milacic will hold the lecture based on the research for his new book dealing with the aforementioned topic and using the example of the former Yugoslavia.
The De- and Re-Democratization Workgroup of the CEU Democracy Institute and the CEU Nationalism Studies Program invite you to this presentation.
To receive the Zoom-link, please register here.*
With respect to the relationship between the state and democracy, the scholarly research thus far has mainly oscillated between two perspectives: “no state, no democracy” vs. “no democracy, no state”. Using the example of former Yugoslav republics, I offer an alternative approach. Contrary to the “no state, no democracy” perspective, I argue that an unresolved stateness problem does not necessarily prevent the emergence of a democracy. However, it could slow down or halt its consolidation and even facilitate democratic backsliding, which are concerns that the “no democracy, no state” perspective seems to be neglecting.
Specifically, I argue that an unresolved stateness problem creates conditions that facilitate the violations of democratic rules. First, its existence creates a fertile ground for political entrepreneurship that is mainly based on ethno-nationalist appeals. Indeed, the dominance of national question in the political system enables political entrepreneurs to successfully play the nationalist card and introduce ‘enemies and traitors’ categorization in political competition. In such a context, the (alleged) challenges to the state and nation justify and legitimize violations of democratic rules, whereas the narrative about national destiny minimizes the resistance to power grabs. In other words, political entrepreneurs combine national identity politics and clientelism to make the playing field uneven; denigrate the opposition, the CSOs, and the independent media by branding them as traitors to national interests; personalize power and dismantle checks and balances by portraying themselves as protectors of national identity, etc.
Second, such a focus of the political actors on the matters of state and nation has the potential to engender a toxic polarization. Polarization that revolves around the national identity based political divisions is a fertile ground for the emergence of the “us” vs. “them” relation and thus of a toxic polarization (especially since polarization is also strategically deepened by political entrepreneurs). In a political system characterized by toxic polarization, even issues that are not inherently partisan become politicized. This furthermore causes political stalemate that translates into the lack of democratic reforms and stagnation. Moreover, the existence of a toxic polarization additionally facilitates the above described attempts to subvert democracy since voters tolerate or even encourage policies that erode democratic norms because the opposing party’s policies are perceived as a threat to the nation.
I believe that my theoretical framework, which argues that the unresolved stateness problem undermines the process of democratic consolidation and facilitates democratic backsliding, could be applied to other countries within the post-communist context that still find themselves in a democratic transition process and thereby face the problem of disputable borders and/or unfinished nation building.
Filip Milačić is Senior Researcher for Democracy and Society at the Friedrich Ebert Stiftung, Vienna. He has studied political sciences and Eastern European history at the University of Heidelberg, receiving his PhD from Humboldt University. Previously, he worked for the Organization for the Security and Co-operation in Europe (OSCE) as well as at the University of Rijeka, University of Montenegro and in German Bundestag. He is also a visiting fellow at the Institute for Human Sciences in Vienna.
Daniel Bochsler is an Associate Professor in Nationalism Studies and at the Political Science Department at Central European University, and a full Professor of Political Science at the University of Belgrade. He received his PhD in Political Science from the University of Geneva. His research deals with the effect of political institutions and social diversity, particularly with ethnic diversity, mostly in democracies in Central and Eastern Europe, or worldwide.
* Please note that the event will be recorded. The edited recording will be shared on YouTube. In case you ask questions during the Q&A sessions, your image and voice could appear in the stream and the video. By registering to the event, you give your explicit permission for your image and voice to be used in the video recording of the event shared online.
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