ID | 105881 |
Title Proper | Democratization and stability in East Asia |
Language | ENG |
Author | Lind, Jennifer |
Publication | 2011. |
Summary / Abstract (Note) | Anticipating future political transitions in East Asia, many scholars worry that Chinese democratization and Korean unification will fuel regional instability. To inform this debate, this article examines theories that make competing claims about the stability of these potential transitions: theories within the "democratization and war" school and economic interdependence theory. I compare the predictions of these theories in the cases of previous East Asian transitions in Japan, South Korea, and Taiwan. Process-tracing evidence shows that (i) xenophobic nationalism or logrolling by political coalitions were not present and that none of these countries pursued bellicose foreign policies during their democratic transitions. Evidence from these cases undermines the broad formulation of democratization and war theory and is consistent with a more recent, narrower version of this theory. Second, (ii) process tracing reveals the stabilizing processes of economic interdependence in all of these cases. Third and finally, contrary to prevailing views that warn of instability during future transitions, (iii) both the narrow version of democratization and war theory and economic interdependence theory forecast stability during the upcoming political transitions in China and Korea. These findings support foreign policy strategies of economic and institutional engagement toward China and the Korean peninsula |
`In' analytical Note | International Studies Quarterly Vol. 55, No.2; June 2011: p.409-436 |
Journal Source | International Studies Quarterly Vol. 55, No.2; June 2011: p.409-436 |
Key Words | Democratization - Stability ; East Asian - Transitions ; Political Transitions - East Asia ; Chinese Democratization ; Democratization and War |