Authors
Mark E Warren
Publication date
2002
Journal
Political Theory
Volume
30
Issue
5
Pages
197-219
Publisher
Sage
Description
As we look back over the political landscape of the twentieth century at the beginning of this new millennium, two features stand out in relief. First, this was a bloody century, with Nazi, Fascist, and Communist regimes alone costing more than 150 million lives. The second feature, materializing mostly in the past fifty years, is a dramatic increase in the number of democratic countries. If, following Freedom House, we define democracies as “political systems whose leaders are elected in competitive multi-party and multi-candidate processes in which opposition parties have a legitimate chance of attaining power or participating in power,” and that have a universal franchise, there were no democracies in 1900. Only 22 of the 154 countries existing in 1950 were democracies, encompassing 31 percent of the world’s population. Today, 119 of the 192 existing countries count as democracies, encompassing 58.2 percent of …
Total citations
200220032004200520062007200820092010201120122013201420152016201720182019202020212022202320243211388192724232718142617312229272221175