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Articles
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Johns Hopkins Univ. Press
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Exchange on Nicaragua
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Learning the Wrong Lessons About Nicaraguan Democracy:
A Response to Anderson and Dodd
By Samuel R. Greene
Samuel R. Greene, a doctoral candidate in the Department of Politics at the Catholic University of America, comments on Leslie Anderson and Larry Dodd's July 2009 essay on Nicaragua's 2008 municipal elections:
Leslie Anderson and Lawrence Dodd reach a curious conclusion in their analysis of Nicaragua’s 2008 municipal elections in the pages of this journal. Despite widespread fraud in the 2008 election, they argue that the landslide Sandinista (FSLN) victory is evidence of the ability of local FSLN leaders to meet constituent needs in Nicaragua’s relatively decentralized government. The election should thus be understood as a sign of the growing autonomy of FSLN municipal leaders. For Anderson and Dodd, this independence serves as an indicator that despite the well-documented problems with Nicaragua’s democracy and institutions at the national level, Nicaragua’s democracy may yet be advancing...read more (PDF).
- Taking the Study of Nicaraguan Politics Seriously:
A Response to Greene on the 2008 Municipal Elections
By Leslie E. Anderson and Lawrence C. Dodd
Leslie E. Anderson, University of Florida Research Foundation Professor, and Lawrence C. Dodd, the Manning J. Dauer Eminent Scholar Chair in Political Science at the University of Florida, respond to Samuel R. Greene's comments on their essay:
We have been invited to respond to Samuel Greene’s review of our July 2009 article, “Nicaragua: Progress Amid Regress?,” and we have accepted the invitation. Our response is informed by 1) careful field work inside the country, including extensive interviews with mayors and council members at the municipal level and legislators and presidential candidates at the national level; 2) extensive original survey data on citizen opinion in Nicaragua, nationwide and in selected municipalities; 3) attention to core arguments within political science about the nature of democratic politics, including the role and value of citizen participation, policy delivery, and accountability in democratic politics; and 4) a perspective on democratization in general that places Nicaragua’s process in that broader picture...read more (PDF).
Journal of Democracy in the Press
- Read "The Resilience of Democracy," Eduardo Posada-Carbó's reflections on the 20th Anniversary of the Journal of Democracy. The article first appeared as “La resistencia democrática” in El Tiempo (Bogota) on 22 January 2010.
Letters from Readers
The Journal of Democracy welcomes letters from its
readers on published articles. Some of the letters we receive from readers may be
posted on this site. Any opinions expressed in the posted letters are those of the letters' authors only,
not of the Journal of Democracy, the National Endowment for Democracy,
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E-mail letters to jod@ned.org.
Letter from Burundi
Deo Pondu Maheshe, director of the Centre d'Etudes et d'Encadrement pour la Participation au Developpement Endogene, comments on David Peterson's essay, "Burundi's Transition: A Beacon for Central Africa," which appeared in the January 2006 issue of the Journal of Democracy.
Je reconnais le niveau d'analyse assez élevé que l'article fait sur la situation de l'évolution
politique dans toute la sous région des grand lacs en Afrique; par ailleurs, son survol de la
situation dans la sous région m'a suggéré un certain nombre de réflexions que je souhaite exprimer:
On reconnaît aujourd'hui, et avec raison, tout le mérite du grand succès que le processus de
transition et son aboutissement au Burundi a permis de décrocher pour tout le peuple Burundais.
Ce dernier a, en effet, fait preuve d'un niveau de maturité fort élevé et montré son soucis de
partir sur des nouvelles bases. La communauté internationale a certes investi beaucoup de moyens
et de diplomatie, mais également tout le peuple Burundais qui à ce moment de son histoire a décidé
de mettre fin à ce cycle de violence sans issue et de s'aligner sur un schéma nouveau (more).
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