Illiberalism and Authoritarianism

Author:

Waller Julian G.1

Affiliation:

1. Political Science, George Washington University

Abstract

Abstract Illiberalism is often associated with the concept of “authoritarianism,” but their relation can be underspecified, confused, contradictory, or overlapping. This is in no small part due to the tricky conceptualization of authoritarianism itself, which holds to surprisingly different definitions across several social-scientific disciplines and deals with the same common problems of usage imprecision. This chapter conceptualizes the relationship between illiberalism and the several understandings of authoritarianism current in the mainstream academic literature. In doing so, it shows how the concept of authoritarianism understood as a form of political regime is the most useful for most scholars working on the subject of illiberalism, although in some ways also the most difficult to adhere. In support of this conclusion, the chapter reviews several prominent and influential alternative definitions of authoritarianism, including psychological-dispositional, psychological-behavioral, policy-ideological, and practice-process conceptualizations. It notes that these other variants of authoritarianism suffer from diverse, internal problems with conceptual coherency, parsimony, bias, rigor, and empirical replicability. Furthermore, they are particularly susceptible to obscuring or even hindering the empirical and theoretical application of illiberalism in scholarly study, although important exceptions and further avenues of exploration are noted as well. Familiarity with definitional problems associated with non-regime conceptualizations of authoritarianism will ultimately facilitate a more precise and nuanced scholarly research approach on illiberalism.

Publisher

Oxford University Press

Reference185 articles.

1. Acemoglu, Daron, Nicolás Ajzenman, Cevat Giray Aksoy, Martin Fiszbein, and Carlos A. Molina. 2021. “(Successful) Democracies Breed Their Own Support.” Working Paper 29167. National Bureau of Economic Research. https://doi.org/10.3386/w29167.

2. Authoritarianism, Populism, and the Global Retreat of Democracy: A Curated Discussion.;Journal of Management Inquiry,2022

3. Alizada, Nazifa, Rowan Cole, Lisa Gastaldi, Sandra Grahn, Sebastian Hellmeier, Palina Kolvani, Jean Lachapelle, et al. 2021. “Democracy Report 2021. Autocratization Turns Viral.” V-Dem Institute Report. University of Gothenburg.

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1. Concept and Varieties of Illiberalism;Politics and Governance;2024-09-11

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