Hybrid regime explained

A hybrid regime is a type of political system often created as a result of an incomplete democratic transition from an authoritarian regime to a democratic one (or vice versa). Hybrid regimes are categorized as having a combination of autocratic features with democratic ones and can simultaneously hold political repressions and regular elections. Hybrid regimes are commonly found in developing countries with abundant natural resources such as petro-states.[1] [2] Although these regimes experience civil unrest, they may be relatively stable and tenacious for decades at a time. There has been a rise in hybrid regimes since the end of the Cold War.[3] [4]

The term hybrid regime arises from a polymorphic view of political regimes that opposes the dichotomy of autocracy or democracy.[5] Modern scholarly analysis of hybrid regimes focuses attention on the decorative nature of democratic institutions (elections do not lead to a change of power, different media broadcast the government point of view and the opposition in parliament votes the same way as the ruling party, among others),[6] from which it is concluded that democratic backsliding, a transition to authoritarianism is the most prevalent basis of hybrid regimes.[7] Some scholars also contend that hybrid regimes may imitate a full dictatorship.[8] [9]

Definition

Scholars vary on the definition of hybrid regimes based on their primary academic discipline.[10] "Some scholars argue that deficient democracies and deficient autocracies can be seen as examples of hybrid regimes, whereas others argue that hybrid regimes combine characteristics of both democratic and autocratic regimes." Scholars also debate if these regimes are in transition or are inherently a stable political system.

In 1995 Terry Karl introduced the notion of "hybrid" regime, which was simply defined as "combining democratic and authoritarian elements".[11]

According to professor Matthijs Bogaards hybrid types are:[12]

Pippa Norris defined hybrid regimes as:[13]

Henry E. Hale defined hybrid regimes as;[14]

Leonardo Morlino defined hybrid regimes as;[15]

Professor Jeffrey C. Isaac defined hybrid regimes as:[16]

History

The third wave of democratization from the 1970s onward has led to the emergence of hybrid regimes that are neither fully democratic nor fully authoritarian.[17] Neither the concept of illiberal democracy, nor the concept of electoral authoritarianism fully describes these hybrid regimes.[18] [19]

Since the end of the Cold War, such regimes have become the most common among undemocratic countries.[20] [21] At the end of the process of transformation of authoritarian regimes, limited elections appear in one way or another when liberalization occurs. Liberal democracy has always been assumed while in practice this process basically froze "halfway".[22]

In relation to regimes that were previously called "transitional" in the 1980s, the term hybrid regime began to be used and was strengthened according to Thomas Carothers:

Hybrid regimes have evolved to lean more authoritarian while keeping some democratic traits.[23] One of the main issues with authoritarian rule is the ability to control the threats from the masses, and democratic elements in hybrid regimes can reduce social tension between the masses and the elite.[24] After the third wave of democratization, some regimes became stuck in the transition to democracy, causing the creation of weak democratic institutions.[25] This results from a lack of institutional ownership during critical points in the transition period leading the regime into a gray zone between democracy and autocracy.[26]

These developments have caused some scholars to believe that hybrid regimes are not poorly functioning democracies, but rather new forms of authoritarian regimes.[27] Defective democratic stability is an indicator to explain and measure these new forms of autocracies.[28] Additionally, approval ratings of political leaders play an important role in these types of regimes, and democratic elements can drive up the ratings of a strongman leader creating a tool not utilized previously.[29] Today, 'hybrid regime' is a term used to explain a growing field of political development where authoritarian leaders incorporate elements of democracy that stabilize their regimes.[30]

Indicators

According to Guillermo O'Donnell, Philippe C. Schmitter, Larry Diamond and Thomas Carothers, signs of a hybrid regime include:[31]

  1. The presence of external attributes of democracy (elections, multi-party system, legal opposition).
  2. A low degree of representation of the interests of citizens in the process of political decision-making (incapacity of associations of citizens, for example trade unions, or that they are in state control).
  3. A low level of political participation.
  4. The declarative nature of political rights and freedoms (formally there is in fact difficult implementation).
  5. A low level of trust in political institutions by the citizenry.

Transition types

See also: Democratic transition.

Democratisation

Measurement

See main article: Democracy indices. There are various democratic freedom indices produced by intergovernmental and non-governmental organizations that publish assessments of the worlds political systems, according to their own definitions.[32]

Democracy Index

According to the Democracy Index compiled by the Economist Intelligence Unit there are 34 hybrid regimes, representing approximately 20% of countries, encompassing 17.2% to 20.5% of the world's population.

"The EIU Democracy Index is based on ratings across 60 indicators, grouped into five categories: electoral process and pluralism, civil liberties, the functioning of government, political participation and political culture."[32] The Democracy Index defines hybrid regimes with the following characteristics:

As of 2021 the countries considered hybrid regimes by the "Democracy Index" are:

Global State of Democracy Report

According to the "Global State of Democracy Report" by International Institute for Democracy and Electoral Assistance (IDEA), there are twenty hybrid regimes.[33] "International IDEA compiles data from 12 different data sources, including expert surveys and observational data includes the extent to which voting rights are inclusive, political parties are free to form and campaign for office, elections are free, and political offices are filled through elections."[32] IDEA defined hybrid regimes as:[34]

As of 2021 the countries considered hybrid regimes by the "Global State of Democracy Report" are:[35]

V-Dem Democracy Indices

According to the V-Dem Democracy Indices compiled by the V-Dem Institute at the University of Gothenburg there are 65 hybrid regimes.[36] V-Dem's "Regimes of the World" indicators identify four political regimes: closed autocracies, electoral autocracies, electoral democracies, and liberal democracies.[37]

According to the V-Dem Institute:[38]

Freedom House

Freedom House measures the level of political and economic governance in 29 countries from Central Europe to Central Asia.

"Freedom House assign scores to countries and territories across the globe on 10 indicators of political rights (e.g., whether there is a realistic opportunity for opposition parties to gain power through elections) and 15 indicators of civil liberties (e.g., whether there is a free and independent media)."[32] Freedom House classifies transitional or hybrid regimes as:[39]

In 2022, Freedom House classified 11 of 29 countries analyzed as "Transitional or Hybrid Regimes":[39]

Typology

According to Yale professor Juan José Linz, there are three main types of political systems today: democracies, totalitarian regimes and, sitting between these two, authoritarian regimes with many different terms that describe specific types of hybrid regimes.[40] [41] [42]

Academics generally refer to a full dictatorship as either a form of authoritarianism or totalitarianism over a "hybrid system".[43] [41] [44] Authoritarian governments that conduct elections are in many scholars view not hybrids, but are successful well-institutionalized stable authoritarian regimes.[45] [46] [47] Democratic elements can simultaneously serve authoritarian purposes and contribute to democratization.[48]

Electoral authoritarianism

Electoral authoritarianism means that democratic institutions are imitative and, due to numerous systematic violations of liberal democratic norms, in fact adhere to authoritarian methods. Electoral authoritarianism can be competitive and hegemonic, and the latter does not necessarily mean election irregularities. A. Schedler calls electoral authoritarianism a new form of authoritarian regime, not a hybrid regime or illiberal democracy. Moreover, a purely authoritarian regime does not need elections as a source of legitimacy[49] while non-alternative elections, appointed at the request of the ruler, are not a sufficient condition for considering the regime conducting them to be hybrid.

Competitive authoritarian regimes

Competitive Authoritarian Regimes (or Competitive Authoritarianism) is a subtype of Authoritarianism and of the wider Hybrid Regime regime type. This regime type was created to encapsulate states that contained formal democratic institutions that rulers viewed as the principal means of obtaining and exercising legitimate political authority with a meaningful opposition and other semblances of democratic political society. However officials violate elections frequently and interfere with opposition organisations causing the regime to miss the minimum conventional standard for democracy.[50] [51] [52] [53]

Three main instruments are used within Competitive Authoritarian Regimes to maintain political power: the self-serving use of state institutions (regarding abuses of electoral and judicial institutions such as voter intimidation and voter fraud); the overuse of state resources (to gain influence and/or power over proportional representation media, and use legal resources to disturb constitutional change); and the disruption of civil liberties (such as freedom of speech/press and association).[54]

Currently, within the political sphere, Competitive Authoritarianism has become a crucial regime type that has grown exponentially since the Post-Soviet era in multiple world regions without signs of slowing. On the contrary, there has been growth of Competitive Authoritarianism within previously steadfast democratic regimes, which has been attributed to the recent phenomenon of democratic backsliding.[55] [56]

See also

Further reading

Contemporary analysts

Research history

The researchers conducted a comparative analysis of political regimes around the world (Samuel Finer 1970), in developing countries (Almond and Coleman, 1960), among Latin America (Collier 1979) and West Africa regimes (Zolberg, 1966). Types of non-democratic regimes are described (Linz, 2000, originally published in 1975 and Perlmutter, 1981). Huntington and Moore (Huntington and Moore, 1970) discuss the one-party system issue Hermet (Guy Hermet, Rose, & Rouquie 1978) explores how elections are held in such authoritarian regimes,which are nominally democratic institutions.

"Hybrid regimes" (Diamond 2002), "competitive authoritarianism" (Levitsky and Way 2002) and "electoral authoritarianism" (Schedler, 2006) as well as how officials who came to power in an undemocratic way form election rules (Lust-Okar and Jamal, 2002), institutionalize electoral frauds (Lehoucq 2003, Schedler 2002) and manipulate the economy (L. Blaydes 2006, Magaloni 2006) in order to win the election and stay in power.

External links

Notes and References

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  2. Carothers . Christopher . The Surprising Instability of Competitive Authoritarianism . Journal of Democracy . 2018 . 29 . 4 . 129–135 . 10.1353/jod.2018.0068 . 158234306 . 1086-3214.
  3. Levitsky . Steven . Way . Lucan . The Rise of Competitive Authoritarianism . Journal of Democracy . Project Muse . 13 . 2 . 2002 . 1086-3214 . 10.1353/jod.2002.0026 . 51–65. 6711009 .
  4. Web site: Competitive Authoritarianism: Hybrid Regimes After the Cold War . Department of Political Science . 2022-11-16 . 2023-04-06 . https://web.archive.org/web/20230406112609/https://politics.utoronto.ca/publication/competitive-authoritarianism-hybrid-regimes-after-the-cold-war/ . live .
  5. Web site: Hybrid Regimes. obo. 2019-08-13. 2019-07-29. https://web.archive.org/web/20190729153059/https://www.oxfordbibliographies.com/view/document/obo-9780199756223/obo-9780199756223-0167.xml. live.
  6. Mufti . Mariam . What Do We Know about Hybrid Regimes after Two Decades of Scholarship? . Politics and Governance . Cogitatio . 6 . 2 . Jun 22, 2018 . 2183-2463 . 10.17645/pag.v6i2.1400 . 112–119. 158943827 . free .
  7. Web site: Home - IDEA Global State of Democracy Report . International IDEA . Nov 26, 2022 . April 4, 2023 . https://web.archive.org/web/20230404092736/https://www.idea.int/gsod/ . live .
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  10. Cassani . Andrea . Hybrid what? Partial consensus and persistent divergences in the analysis of hybrid regimes . International Political Science Review . SAGE . 35 . 5 . September 3, 2013 . 0192-5121 . 10.1177/0192512113495756 . 542–558. 144881011 .
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  12. Bogaards . Matthijs . 2009 . How to classify hybrid regimes? Defective democracy and electoral authoritarianism . Democratization . 16 . 2 . 399–423 . 10.1080/13510340902777800 . 1351-0347 . 145315763.
  13. Norris . Pippa . Is Western Democracy Backsliding? Diagnosing the Risks . SSRN Electronic Journal . Elsevier . 2017 . 1556-5068 . 10.2139/ssrn.2933655 . 157117940 . 2022-12-09 . 2023-04-04 . https://web.archive.org/web/20230404021613/https://research.hks.harvard.edu/publications/getFile.aspx?Id=1514 . live .
  14. Hale . Henry E. . Eurasian Polities as Hybrid Regimes: The Case of Putin's Russia . Journal of Eurasian Studies . SAGE Publications . 1 . 1 . 2010 . 1879-3665 . 10.1016/j.euras.2009.11.001 . 33–41.
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