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Please take a moment to visit and log in at the subscriber area, and submit your city & country location. We will use this information in future to invite you to any events that we organize in your area. Dear Reader: You can hear the interview of me by NPR's John Hockenberry at "In History, a Template for Egypt's Future?" Yours sincerely, Daniel Pipes Why Egypt Will Not Soon Become Democraticby Daniel Pipes http://www.danielpipes.org/9420/democratic-egypt
The Economist asked Anoush Ehteshami of Durham University and Daniel Pipes to address the motion: "Egypt will become a democracy within a year." Ehteshami's response in favor can be read here. Mr. Pipes's opposition follows below. Two reasons lead me to assert that the Arab Republic of Egypt will not boast a democratic political system at this time next year. First, democracy is more than holding elections; it requires the development of civil society, meaning such complex and counterintuitive institutions as the rule of law, an independent judiciary, multiple political parties, minority rights, voluntary associations, freedom of expression, movement, and assembly. Democracy is a learned habit, not an instinctive one, that requires deep attitudinal changes such as a culture of restraint, a commonality of values, a respect for differences of view, the concept of loyal opposition, and a sense of civic responsibility. Further, elections need to be practiced to be made perfect. Ideally, a country starts electing at the municipal level and moves to the national, it begins with the legislative branch and moves to the executive. Simultaneously, the press needs to acquire full freedoms, political parties should mature, parliament should gain authority at the expense of the executive, and judges should adjudicate between them. Such a transformation of society cannot take place within months or even years; the historical record shows that it takes decades fully to implement. It is out of the question that an Egypt with minor experience in democracy can put together enough of these components in twelve months to establish a fully democratic order. Second, whichever scenario one plays out, democracy is not in the offing.
However looked at – abstractly or specifically – Egyptians are in for a rough ride ahead, without imminent prospect of choosing their leaders.
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Friday, February 4, 2011
#1061 Pipes in The Economist: prospects for democracy in Egypt
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