cover of episode Postscript: Calibrating the Outrage-Democratic Erosion, Legality, and Politics

Postscript: Calibrating the Outrage-Democratic Erosion, Legality, and Politics

2025/5/19
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New Books in Political Science

Shownotes Transcript

We’ve been focusing on the dynamics of democratic backsliding in the United States and beyond. In this episode of Postscript: Conversations on Politics and Political Science, Susan talks the co-founder and co-director of the Democratic Erosion Consortium, Dr. Robert Blair about how the Consortium offers FREE resources to teachers, students, journalists, policy makers, and any interested person – including shared syllabus, readings, assignments, YouTube virtual roundtables, and policy briefs. Rob defines democratic erosion and offers critical insights on the importance of interdisciplinarity, calibrating outrage, and distinguishing between policy disputes and the erosion of democracy. He offers a clear-headed analysis of what is legal v. what breaks down democracy that is not to be missed. We conclude with thoughts on what *everyone *can do protect democracy.

Dr. Robert Blair) is Associate Professor of Political Science and International and Public Affairs at Brown University and co-founder and co-director of the Democratic Erosion Consortium). He studies the consolidation of state authority after civil war, with an emphasis on rule of law and security institutions, as well as the causes and consequences of democratic backsliding. His book, Peacekeeping, Policing, and the Rule of Law after Civil War), was published in 2020 with Cambridge University Press and his articles appear in political science outlets such as American Political Science Review, American Journal of Political Science, *Journal of Politics, Comparative Political Studies, *and *International Organization *but also science journals such as ScienceNature Human Behaviour, or Current Opinion in Psychology.

Mentioned:

- Inside Higher Ed piece on grants terminated by the Trump administration), including one that funded the Democratic Erosion Consortium

Democratic Erosion Project website) and data set)

  • Chris Geidner, Law Dork: Supreme Court, Law, Politics, and More) Substack

  • Center for Systemic Peace’s Polity Project) coding authority characteristics of states in the world system

  • University of Notre Dame’s V-Dem Project) measuring democracy

  • Rob mentioned Brazil as a fruitful comparison for the US. He is particularly focused on how the courts can defend democratic institutions and processes – and how hard it can be to know where to draw the line between courts protecting vs. assailing democracy, and to know when the line has been crossed. Two gift articles from The New York Times here) and here).

  • Contact info for Rob: [email protected])

  • Follow Rob and Democratic Erosion Consortium on social media: @robert_a_blair on X, @DemErosionDEC on X, @robertblair.bsky.social on BlueSky, @demerosiondec.bsky.social on BlueSky

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