From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
An authoritarian enclave is a non-democratic subunit of a democratic system.
[1]
[2]
[3]
[4]
[5]
[6]
[7] It may be an
administrative division of a state or a
ministry (such as the military, education or media).
[8]
References
^ Mickey, Robert (2015). Paths Out of Dixie: The Democratization of Authoritarian Enclaves in America's Deep South, 1944-1972 . Princeton University Press.
ISBN
978-0-691-14963-9 .
^ Benton, Allyson Lucinda (2012).
"Bottom-Up Challenges to National Democracy: Mexico's (Legal) Subnational Authoritarian Enclaves" . Comparative Politics . 44 (3): 253–271.
doi :
10.5129/001041512800078931 .
ISSN
0010-4159 .
JSTOR
23212796 .
^ Petersen, German (2018). "Elites and Turnovers in Authoritarian Enclaves: Evidence from Mexico". Latin American Politics and Society . 60 (2): 23–40.
doi :
10.1017/lap.2018.4 .
ISSN
1531-426X .
S2CID
158275919 .
^ Curato, Nicole (2018). "From authoritarian enclave to deliberative space: governance logics in post-disaster reconstruction". Disasters . 42 (4): 635–654.
doi :
10.1111/disa.12280 .
PMID
29484700 .
^ Lawson, Chappell (2000). "Mexico's Unfinished Transition: Democratization and Authoritarian Enclaves in Mexico". Mexican Studies/Estudios Mexicanos . 16 (2): 267–287.
doi :
10.2307/1052198 .
JSTOR
1052198 .
^ Herrmann, Julián Durazo (2014).
"Reflections on Regime Change and Democracy in Bahia, Brazil" . Latin American Research Review . 49 (3): 23–44.
doi :
10.1353/lar.2014.0050 .
ISSN
0023-8791 .
JSTOR
43670192 .
S2CID
144223560 .
^ Gibson, Edward L. (2012). Boundary Control: Subnational Authoritarianism in Federal Democracies . Cambridge University Press.
ISBN
978-0-521-19223-1 .
^
Twenty Years of Studying Democratization; Vol 2: Democratization, Democracy and Authoritarian Continuity .
Taylor & Francis . 2016. pp. 102–103.
ISBN
9781317660873 .