| |
Back to Index
How
Freedom is Won: From Civic Resistance to Durable Democracy
Freedom House
May 24,
2005
View
the Zimbabwe Country Report
Download
- Overview essay by Adrian Karatnycky and Peter Ackerman
- Acrobat
PDF version (61KB)
- Methodology
for the research study
- Acrobat
PDF version (34KB)
If you do not have the free Acrobat reader
on your computer, download it from the Adobe website by clicking
here.
http://www.freedomhouse.org/research/specreports/civictrans/
A major new
study released today by Freedom House shows that nonviolent "people
power" movements are the strongest force in most successful
transitions to democracy.
The study, "How
Freedom is Won: From Civic Struggle to Durable Democracy,"
focuses on 67 countries where dictatorships have fallen since 1972.
It draws on over 30 years of Freedom House data analyzing the state
of global freedom and is the most comprehensive examination of political
transitions ever conducted.
The report's
central conclusion is that how a transition from authoritarianism
occurs and the forces that drive the transition have significant
impact on the success or failure of democratic reform. In large
measure, the study finds that transitions generated by nonviolent
civic coalitions lead to far better results for freedom than top-down
transitions initiated by elites.
The study finds
that "people power" is a frequent phenomenon, and civic
coalitions are a major presence in most transitions. In 50 of the
67 transitions, or over 70 percent of countries where authoritarian
systems fell, nonviolent civic resistance was a strong influence.
Civic resistance employs such tactics as mass protests, boycotts,
blockades, strikes, and civil disobedience to challenge the legitimacy
of and erode support for authoritarian rulers.
"This study
is of special significance in the wake of mass-based nonviolent
political ferment in Lebanon, post-election upheaval Kyrgyzstan,
and the transitions toward democracy in Ukraine and Georgia that
followed nonviolent, civic-led protests," said Freedom House
Executive Director Jennifer Windsor. "The study is especially
timely as international organizations and many governments are considering
how best to promote democracy and rights worldwide."
The new study
focuses on transitions that have occurred since 1972, when Freedom
House began publishing its annual, global, comparative survey of
political rights and civil liberties, Freedom in the World (the
post-war transitions in Western Europe and Japan were therefore
excluded). Freedom in the World rates countries as "Free"
(where there is a broad range of rights), "Partly Free"
(where some rights and liberties are restricted), and "Not
Free" (where many or all rights are systematically denied).
Among the
key findings:
- Freedom and
democracy are best advanced by powerful, broad-based, and cohesive
civic coalitions employing non-violent tactics; in 32 transitions
in which strong non-violent civic coalitions were active, 24 countries
(75%) are Free, 8 (25%) are Partly Free, and none are Not Free
today.
- The largest
gains for freedom occur as a result of transitions driven primarily
or in large measure by significant civic protest and mobilization.
Of 50 such transitions, 32 have led to high levels of respect
for political rights and civil liberties. By contrast, in the
14 transitions from authoritarian rule in which the driving force
was from the "top down" and led primarily by reform-minded
power holders, only 3 (21%) are Free, with strong performance
in terms of fundamental rights. Three other transitions were sparked
by international military intervention.
- When cohesive
and strong civic coalitions emerge in an environment where there
is little or no violence, the result almost uniformly is a high
level of freedom. Pre-transition, 9 such countries were Partly
Free and 9 were Not Free. Today, post-transition, 17 are Free,
and only 1 is Partly Free.
- Even in settings
of significant or high violence, the prospects for freedom are
significantly better when the opposition refrains from using violence.
In the 20 countries in which both the government and segments
of the opposition used violence, only 20 percent of the countries
are Free today, while 60 percent are Partly Free, and 4 are Not
Free. By contrast, in the 12 countries where the authorities employed
violent force but the opposition resisted with nonviolent tactics,
7 (nearly 60 percent) are Free, while 5 (more than 40 percent)
are Partly Free.
The study
offers a series of recommendations for policy makers:
- After the
collapse of authoritarian rule, many transitions fail to result
in consolidated democracy. It is therefore vital that the international
community invest in the emergence of broad-based, non-violent
civic coalitions in closed and/or transitional societies.
- Governments,
regional bodies, and global institutions should exert diplomatic
and other pressures on states to curb repression and create political
space for civil society activity.
- Democratic
governments and outside donors should pressure states to ensure
free, fair, and transparent electoral processes and offer timely
support when civic forces peacefully rally in opposition to sham
elections, as recently witnessed in Ukraine and Georgia.
- Despite the
abiding importance of civic coalitions and civic nonviolent resistance
in recent transitions from dictatorship, only a small proportion
of international aid assists nonviolent civic movements and groups;
such support should be increased and support grants focus on sustaining
the infrastructure of emerging civic groups and civic coalitions,
especially in their early stages of formation.
- Training
in strategies of nonviolent civic resistance should be an important
component of technical assistance efforts.
"Given
increased international attention to the expansion of freedom, there
is an urgent need to understand the crucial role of civic nonviolent
resistance in the promotion of democracy and liberty and to respond
with new resources and new aid initiatives," said Adrian Karatnycky,
senior scholar at Freedom House and director of the study.
"'People
power' works when ordinary civilians learn the skills needed to
conduct strategic nonviolent action, so teaching those skills should
be at the heart of new assistance to civic movements and activists,"
said Peter Ackerman, co-author of the study's overview and chair
of the International Center on Nonviolent Conflict.
A team of Freedom
House analysts produced the study, which is composed of an overview,
detailed comparative data, a methodology, and individual country
reports. An advisory board of respected scholars from Johns Hopkins
University, Harvard University, Stanford University, Rutgers University,
and the Inter-American Dialogue reviewed the study's coding and
underlying data.
Freedom House
prepared the study with support from the International Center on
Nonviolent Conflict, a group that disseminates knowledge and helps
improve skills in using nonviolent strategies where progress toward
democracy and human rights is possible.
Zimbabwe
Country Report
| Period
of Transition |
1976-1980 |
|
|
| |
Political Rights |
Civil
Liberties |
Status |
| Freedom
Rating (Yr. Before Transition) |
6 |
5 |
*NF (FIW
1976) |
| Freedom
Rating (2004) |
7 |
6 |
NF |
TRANSITION
CHARACTERISTICS |
|
| The
Factor of Violence |
High
Level of Violence |
| Sources
of Violence |
State
& Opposition |
| Forces
Driving the Transition |
Powerholders |
| Strength
of Nonviolent Civic Coalitions |
Weak
or Absent |
NARRATIVE
In 1976, economic sanctions, guerrilla warfare, the end of Portuguese
colonial rule in neighboring countries, and diplomatic pressure
forced the Rhodesian government of Ian Smith to agree in principle
to majority rule and to meet with black nationalist leaders. The
following year, amid international pressure, an "internal settlement"
was signed by the Smith government and black leaders including Bishop
Abel Muzorewa and Rev. Nadabaningi Sithole, but excluding Robert
Mugabe’s ZANU (PF) party. The settlement provided for qualified
majority rule and free elections, held in April 1979, resulting
in a victory for Muzorewa. However, the guerilla conflict that had
killed thousands did not end, and later that year Britain convened
deliberations with the African parties in London. On December 21,
1979, an agreement was signed in London calling for a cease-fire,
new elections, a transition period under British rule, and a new
constitution implementing majority rule while protecting minority
rights. The UN Security Council approved the settlement and lifted
all sanctions on the soon-to-be independent state of Zimbabwe. Free
and fair elections were held in February 1980 and resulted in a
victory for Robert Mugabe and his ZANU (PF) party, who formed the
first government. Zimbabwe was granted independence in April, and
its first representative parliament convened in May.
Notes
The freedom ratings are derived from the annual Freedom House survey
Freedom in the World, and include the category rating (Free, Partly
Free, Not Free) and the numerical rating (1-7), with 1 representing
best practices in the
areas of political rights and civil liberties and 7 representing
the worst practices. Post-transition ratings are taken from the
most recent edition of the survey, Freedom in the World 2005.
* NF - Not
Free,
FIW - Freedom in the World, 1976 survey
Please credit www.kubatana.net if you make use of material from this website.
This work is licensed under a Creative Commons License unless stated otherwise.
TOP
|