The (Too-Low but) Rising Quality of Democracy in Brazil and Chile
Conference/Workshop ProceedingAuthor
Frances Hagopian
Published
2003
There is a reading of democracy in both these countries that is not optimistic. In a recent assessment of the nature of Brazil's democratic regime, Kurt Weyland characterized Brazil's democracy as "low quality." He bases this characterization on Brazil's gross level of inequality and the incapacity of Brazilian civil society effectively to demand that government redress inequality. He goes on to argue that it is precisely because Brazil's democracy is of "low quality" that it can survive so well.
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Topics: Democracy | Poverty, inequality, and democracy | Brazil | Chile



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