The Power of Counterrevolution: Elitist Origins of Political Order in Postcolonial Asia and Africa

Counterrevolutions have received far less scholarly attention than revolutions, despite their comparable importance in shaping the modern political world. This article defines counterrevolutions as collective and reactive efforts to defend the status quo and its varied range of dominant elites again...

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Veröffentlicht in:The American journal of sociology 2016-03, Vol.121 (5), p.1472-1516
Hauptverfasser: Slater, Dan, Smith, Nicholas Rush
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description Counterrevolutions have received far less scholarly attention than revolutions, despite their comparable importance in shaping the modern political world. This article defines counterrevolutions as collective and reactive efforts to defend the status quo and its varied range of dominant elites against a credible threat to overturn them from below. Unlike analysts who see the origins of political order lying in mass-mobilizing revolutionary parties, the authors illuminate the distinctive order-producing attributes of elite-protecting counterrevolutionary parties. A comparative-historical analysis of five former British colonies in Southeast Asia and sub-Saharan Africa elaborates the causal mechanisms through which counterrevolutions can produce exceedingly durable, although not invincible, political orders.
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source Worldwide Political Science Abstracts; Sociological Abstracts; JSTOR Archive Collection A-Z Listing
subjects Colonies & territories
Counterrevolution
Deception
Decolonization
Elites
Historical analysis
International comparisons
Political power
Politics
Power
Revolutions
Threats
title The Power of Counterrevolution: Elitist Origins of Political Order in Postcolonial Asia and Africa
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