Poland’s nationalist-conservative government and the opposition are digging in for a long tug-of-war over the country’s direction.
Calls for non-Western forms of democracy have been around for many years but are now becoming louder and more ubiquitous. This trend can be expected to deepen as an integral element of the emerging post-Western world order.
To make progress on stamping out corruption, Ukraine requires targeted reform of the powerful institutions that perpetuate corrupt practices, particularly the justice system.
The EU needs to step up its support for Ukraine’s still-fragile democracy, focusing on the three areas of conditionality, decentralization, and engagement with civil society.
The UN sustainable development goal of peace, justice, and strong institutions is an important step forward for global development, but its meaning is inevitably imprecise.
Social conservatives are on the march across the world—but there’s no reason they can’t play by democratic rules.
There are growing calls for an EU policy that can confront the drivers of instability in the Middle East. But such a policy is unlikely to emerge anytime soon.
Every week, a selection of leading experts answer a new question from Judy Dempsey on the foreign and security policy challenges shaping Europe’s role in the world.
Calls for non-Western democracy are proliferating, and they flow both from political changes within states and from shifts in global power balances between states.
Experts argue in favor of non-Western models of democracy. The challenge is to understand what such models should look like and what democracy means in practice.