So I was reading the nice little bit from The Economist, and lo and behold, I found it to be talking about the same sort of issues I brought up in my Cabaret-esque post. The article is mainly a skeptical look at Freedom House and its inherent US bias, but it also challenges their ideas of "free", "partly free", and "free".
As you can see from the image above, there are many countries that became free from 1982 to 2007, but there are just many that went completely backwards in their freedom ratings. My theory on why that is, The Cold War and its aftermath, oil politics, and then finally the war on terror. There are probably other factors involved as well in the various countries, but those I think are the most shared reasons.
So the really really interesting bit I wanted to point out from it is this:
"How much freer do people feel when they have a few roubles or yuan in their pocket (and access to other goodies like computers and compact discs)? That is an endlessly debatable question. By contrast the sort of liberties and non-liberties measured by Freedom House (multi-party elections, due process and so on) are relatively tangible and easy to assess. That alone may be quite a good argument for having at least one index whose stated purpose is to assess formal freedoms—to vote, speak, assemble and so on. That does not imply that other factors, such as prosperity, have no bearing on how free people feel."
Like the good constructivist I am, I like to focus a lot on how people feel, and so the importance of how free populations feel is paramount. Its whether or not these feelings match up with empirical definitions of the democratic system is the really question, at least for me. China is a great example, and one the article mentions as well. It is poorly ranked for civil liberties, yet its a pretty stable and prosperous country.
You may have discovered at the end of this post that I have deconstructed a particular set of ideas, but I'm not really sure what to construct in their place. Well, I'll figure it out soon enough.
Take a moment, think about it, listen to this wonderful little 90's ditty about Freedom from George Michael, and then make a comment.
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