Wednesday, January 15, 2014

Democratic Breakthroughs in the balance

 
(Above: Paul McCartney at the 2008 Nobel Peace Prize Event. Best rock front man ever for the world, Sir  Paul or Knight Bono? -- Bono can't be a Sir because he's Irish, we'll deal with that later)
 

The emergence of popular movements for reform were the driving force behind major gains in the Middle East last year, according to Freedom in the World 2013, Freedom House's annual report on the state of global freedom. However, a number of regions experienced setbacks due to a hardened and increasingly shrewd authoritarian response to these movements.
 
While the number of countries ranked as Free in 2012 was 90, a gain of 3 over the previous year, 27 countries showed significant declines, compared with 16 that showed notable gains. This is the seventh consecutive year that Freedom in the World has shown more declines than gains worldwide. Furthermore, the report data reflected a stepped-up campaign of persecution by dictators that specifically targeted civil society organizations and independent media.
 
Among the most striking gains for freedom was that of Libya, which advanced from Not Free to Partly Free and registered one of the most substantial one-year numerical improvements in the report's nearly 40-year history. Burma and a number of African countries, including Côte d'ivoire, Guinea, Lesotho, Senegal, and Sierra Leone, also saw major advances. Noteworthy declines were recorded for Kazakhstan, Kenya, Mali, Nigeria, Russia, Turkey, and Ukraine.
 
The Middle East showed ambiguous results for the year. In addition to major gains for Libya, and
Tunisia's retention of sharp improvements from 2011, Egypt experienced relatively modest progress. The country held a flawed but competitive presidential election and direct military rule came to an end, yet the elected parliament was dissolved and President Morsi pushed through a new constitution under deeply problematic circumstances.
 
Moreover, the gains for the Arab Spring countries triggered a reaction, sometimes violent, by authoritarian leaders elsewhere in the Middle East, with resulting setbacks for freedom in Iraq, Jordan, Kuwait, Lebanon, Oman, Syria, and the United Arab Emirates.
 
The report's findings were especially grim for Eurasian countries. Russia took a decided turn for the worse after Vladimir Putin's return to the presidency. Having already marginalized the formal political opposition, he enacted a series of laws meant to squelch a burgeoning societal opposition. The measures imposed severe new penalties on unauthorized demonstrations, restricted the ability of civic groups to raise funds and conduct their work, and placed new controls on the internet.
 
Citing an accentuation of repression in a number of critical countries, the report urges the United States and other democracies to demonstrate leadership in the struggle for freedom. It criticizes both the Obama administration and the Republican opposition for a reluctance to provide that leadership.
 
 
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Your Freedom House CP 6 Assignment
 
In groups of four students (4) divide and conquer and drop knowledge on our six (6) case study countries. You will present your findings on how your country rates through the: political; economic and social lenses on Thursday. Did your country get more/less free over the last year?
 
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Trends in comparative politics on the AP test are: globalisation and democratization. For reference, here are the College Board's briefing papers on these trends:
 
 
 
 

3 comments:

Brianne S. said...

Here is the link for the United Kingdom Powerpoint.

https://docs.google.com/presentation/d/1FEhgBfQthC7mEWByewXCuH5nqKOfrn1qkW05HbSLH6k/edit?usp=sharing

Hot Pocket said...

Here is the link to the China powerpoint:

https://docs.google.com/presentation/d/14NpSMG818Ogic9LjN8AEnob2A-kQOdI7lqnbTxErW9M/edit?usp=sharing

Stephen S. said...

Here is the link for the Russian Power Point.


https://docs.google.com/a/ipsd.org/presentation/d/1uGKu1D_10YgjlI936Zd5KyHF79JUOaaFFVEiwA8Mdnw/edit?usp=sharing