Book contents
- Promoting Democracy, Reinforcing Authoritarianism
- Cambridge Middle East Studies
- Promoting Democracy, Reinforcing Authoritarianism
- Copyright page
- Dedication
- Contents
- Figures
- Additional material
- Preface: In Jordan ‘Reform Is Not a Strange Word’
- Acknowledgements
- Note on Transliteration
- Abbreviations and Acronyms
- 1 ‘Democracy Promotion’ and Moral Authority
- 2 Who’s Afraid of Politics?
- 3 Supporting, Mobilising for and Ignoring Jordanian Elections
- 4 The Jordanian Civil Society Market
- 5 Break on Through to the Other Side
- 6 Securing Jordan
- 7 Imperial Coercion, Liberal Intervention and the Rise of Populist Politics
- Sources and Bibliography
- Index
- Books in the Series
2 - Who’s Afraid of Politics?
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 04 November 2019
- Promoting Democracy, Reinforcing Authoritarianism
- Cambridge Middle East Studies
- Promoting Democracy, Reinforcing Authoritarianism
- Copyright page
- Dedication
- Contents
- Figures
- Additional material
- Preface: In Jordan ‘Reform Is Not a Strange Word’
- Acknowledgements
- Note on Transliteration
- Abbreviations and Acronyms
- 1 ‘Democracy Promotion’ and Moral Authority
- 2 Who’s Afraid of Politics?
- 3 Supporting, Mobilising for and Ignoring Jordanian Elections
- 4 The Jordanian Civil Society Market
- 5 Break on Through to the Other Side
- 6 Securing Jordan
- 7 Imperial Coercion, Liberal Intervention and the Rise of Populist Politics
- Sources and Bibliography
- Index
- Books in the Series
Summary
The chapter demonstrates the primacy of ‘the procedural’ in overarching US and European policy documents, as well as in discourses of ‘democracy promoters’. It argues that the underlying structural power dynamics of Jordanian authoritarianism are fundamentally ignored, as the Jordanian regime is in important ways portrayed as a mere result of a lack of capacity among Jordanians at large and at times even as an agent of democratisation. Based on an in-depth analysis of a USAID-commissioned assessment of its Democracy and Governance portfolio in Jordan, and of a political party training event funded by USAID and implemented by the IRI, the chapter discusses different modes of institutional reproduction, as well as the self-perpetuating tendencies of ‘democracy promotion’ in the face of seeming practical failure. Ultimately, the chapter contends that external attempts at ‘democracy promotion’ only strengthen authoritarian stability in the country. Such interventions are thus shown to directly accept, depend on and reinforce the Jordanian regime’s questionable reform narrative, which problematises the imagined ‘Jordanian non-democratic other’ instead of authoritarian structures of power.
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- Promoting Democracy, Reinforcing AuthoritarianismUS and European Policy in Jordan, pp. 36 - 67Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2019