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What Can Democracies Learn From Dictatorships?
Season 9 · Episode 2

What Can Democracies Learn From Dictatorships?

This week we ask: Can struggling democracies learn anything useful from well performing dictatorships?

UCL Uncovering Politics · Charles Dunst, Professor Alan Renwick

May 4, 202333m 2s

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Show Notes

This week we welcome a special guest who has direct experience at the sharp end of politics. Charles Dunst is a former foreign correspondent who has reported from many countries around the world, who is now deputy director of research & analytics at The Asia Group – a business advisory firm based in Washington, D.C. – and an adjunct fellow at the Center for Strategic and International Studies, an independent and bipartisan DC-based think tank. 

Charles has just published a new book, Defeating the Dictators: How Democracy Can Prevail in the Age of the Strongman, in which he argues that democracies that are struggling with low public trust and poor performance might have a thing or two to learn about effective governance from the world’s more successful autocracies – most notably Singapore, but also others. 

 

Mentioned in this episode:

Topics

trust in politicsukdemocracytrustgovernancesingaporedictatorspolicyautocracyuclalan renwickpoliticsusacharles dunst