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Evolutionary and Revolutionary pathways of bottom-up subnational authoritarian enclave democratization

Comparative Politics
Contentious Politics
Democratisation
Local Government
Regionalism
Social Movements
Developing World Politics
Qualitative
Trix van Mierlo
University of Innsbruck
Trix van Mierlo
University of Innsbruck

Abstract

We know that subnational authoritarian enclaves can democratize when a national level government, opposition party, an effective policy or a neighbouring country intervenes. However, we still know surprisingly little about the existence of a bottom-up pathway to subnational democratization. In this paper, I theorize two such pathways: the evolutionary and the revolutionary one. In the evolutionary pathway, social movement actors start with making covert claims. They activate a self-productive sequence that directly facilitates subnational democratization. In the revolutionary pathway, social movement actors start by making overt claims. They activate a self-destructive sequence that indirectly facilitates subnational democratization. This theory is the product of Comparative Historical Analysis of original empirical evidence that I gathered during fieldwork on two cases. I show that social movement actors took the evolutionary pathway in Isabela, the Philippines and the revolutionary pathway in Oaxaca, Mexico.