The Source of Georgia’s Democratic Resilience

Issue Date January 2025
Volume 36
Issue 1
Page Numbers 123–134
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After years of democratic backsliding, Georgia experienced a dramatic shift toward autocratization in 2024, with the Georgian Dream government passing restrictive laws and manipulating parliamentary elections. However, Georgian society’s response has grown more determined and inclusive, demonstrating a pattern of cyclical resilience where autocratization and democratic resistance unfold in parallel. While this pushback has not yet sparked a democratic turnaround, it has ensured fierce contestation of autocratic moves. The case of Georgia illuminates how pluralistic values and civic mobilization can serve as primary sources of resilience, even when formal institutional safeguards falter. Georgia’s experience shows that democratic culture can deepen even as autocratization advances.

About the Authors

Elene Panchulidze

Elene Panchulidze is research coordinator at the European Partnership for Democracy.

View all work by Elene Panchulidze

Richard Youngs

Richard Youngs is a senior fellow in the Democracy, Conflict, and Governance Program at Carnegie Europe, professor at the University of Warwick, and co-founder of the European Democracy Hub.

View all work by Richard Youngs

Image Credit: Jelger Groeneveld via Flickr