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Popular Dictatorships: Crises, Mass Opinion, and the Rise of Electoral Authoritarianism. By Aleksandar Matovski. Cambridge, Eng.: Cambridge University Press, 2021. xvi, 316 pp. Notes. Bibliography. Index. Illustrations. Figures. Tables. $39.99, hard bound.

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Popular Dictatorships: Crises, Mass Opinion, and the Rise of Electoral Authoritarianism. By Aleksandar Matovski. Cambridge, Eng.: Cambridge University Press, 2021. xvi, 316 pp. Notes. Bibliography. Index. Illustrations. Figures. Tables. $39.99, hard bound.

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  18 April 2024

Irina Soboleva*
Affiliation:
Duke Kunshan University
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Abstract

Type
Book Review
Copyright
Copyright © The Author(s), 2024. Published by Cambridge University Press on behalf of Association for Slavic, East European, and Eurasian Studies

Electoral authoritarian regimes (EARs)—autocracies that imitate democratic elections—are the most widespread type of contemporary non-democracies. Among the many puzzles surrounding the proliferation of these regimes in countries as different as Turkey, Venezuela, Nigeria, and Russia, the core puzzle lies in the genuine popular support that these regimes seem to enjoy. While some scholars emphasize the fruitlessness of studying sincere public opinion in countries with limited space for expressing dissent, others believe that autocrats in hybrid regimes are backed up by widespread approval.

In Popular Dictatorships, Aleksandar Matovski (Naval Postgraduate School) advances the latter view by suggesting that the principal catalysts behind the genuine popularity of EARs are poorly managed political crises. Traumatized societies prefer EARs to military rule and liberal democracies because EARs “combine the best and avoid the worst of both democracy and authoritarianism” (4): they use democratic elections to project mass support, and secure authoritarian control by framing their leaders as emergency-managing, strong-armed rulers.

The opening chapters introduce the crisis origins of EARs. A crisis can give rise to a strongman offering a solution to the collective trauma behind it. To rationalize a popularly mandated emergency rule, autocrats use a universal rhetorical narrative that emphasizes the democratic nature of their rule; satisfies the need for collective self-preservation under threat; and dismisses opponents as incompetent and weak. When voters no longer need authoritarian crisis management, they shift back to the anti-authoritarian side of the regime cleavage. This dependence on popular demand incentivizes EARs to provide economic growth and order while “maintaining a sense of a genuine existential threat to justify their reign” (71).

The following chapters test this theory with rich macro- and micro-level data. Through cross-national analyses of regime transition, Matovski demonstrates that EARs emerge in response to acute economic or security crises (Chap. 3). Chap. 4 successfully detects the universal rhetoric of EARs using 3,030 electoral manifestos from 54 countries and a study of the electoral appeals of Mexico's PRI (Institutional Revolutionary Party). Both analyses confirm the fixation of EARs on the threats to national identity and intense attacks on opponents’ incompetence. Chap. 5 illustrates how these patterns played out in Russia, where the trauma of the Soviet collapse and subsequent economic downfall made Vladimir Putin an appealing alternative to other political candidates. In the final chapter, Matovski leverages the World Values Survey data to confirm that EARs emerge in societies that prioritize survival values over self-expression.

Matovski's empirical approach diligently replicates his central thesis of the crisis origins of EARs at several levels of analysis, descending from the bird's-eye, macro-level study of regime transitions to a fine-grained investigation of individual survival values. Although appropriate and well-executed, this approach comes with the cost of sacrificing depth for breadth. Reiterating the importance of deep crises, a traumatized audience, and rhetoric that “translates popular anxieties into a persistent electoral advantage” (168–69), Matovski leaves us longing for a more detailed analysis of each parameter. Where do crises come from? Why does protracted violent conflict predict a transition to EAR for democracies, but not for military dictatorships? Why do crises make closed dictatorships transition to democracy if they activate survival values and strengthen the rally-around-the-strongman? The second part of the equation—the traumatized audience—assumes that crises directly translate to traumas, which is not always true. When do EARs fail to capitalize on widespread traumas? Explaining the dissolution of EARs despite their continuous efforts to exploit the state of emergency would test the theory's limits. The analysis of successful opposition rhetoric would be rewarding. Finally, countries are unequally exposed to survival-threatening challenges. Would this susceptibility predict the orientation to survival values and the likelihood of EAR transition? Moreover, few countries reoriented from pure self-expression to pure survival values in the past twenty years, but we witnessed many more transitions to EARs. Explaining these patterns would enrich this research.

These limitations should not overshadow the excellent contributions of the book. Matovski provides a full-fledged and thoroughly tested theory that is sensitive to lived experiences and acknowledges that societies might reluctantly prioritize EARs amidst violent conflicts. A refreshing step forward from the institutional narrative that dominates the research on EARs, Matovski's theory incorporates the long-term legacies of collective hardship. This move pays off: the EAR rhetoric alone predicts whether a country is an electoral autocracy better than structural correlates of electoral authoritarianism (such as resource dependence and coercive potential of the state)—a thought-provoking-finding that underscores the oft-neglected power of narratives in regime transitions.