The Persian translation of the book “Democracy’s decline and rise: Global history from ancient times to today” written by Tehran -David Status Vage has been released in Iran’s book market.
MEHR reported that Lila Sazgar has translated a book currently published by publishers on page 506.
This book presents a new understanding of how early democracy, why modern democracy has evolved, and what this history teaches us about the future.
Historical descriptions on the rise of democracy tend to focus on ancient Greece and Europe before Europe. The “decline of democracy” is brought out of global evidence and indicates that the story is much richer. Democratic practices often exist in many cases, from the United States before Europe to the ancient Mesopotamia and Africa in the colonial era.
Davanance can understand the methods and places of these democracy, and when, and when, and when, David Stasquage Democracy claims that it can provide important information not only in history but also in modern methods, and can appear in the future.
From an example of thousands of years, Stasavage first, in consideration of the reason why the state developed either a democratic or dictative governance, intuitively, is intuitive and intuitive. It claims that it tends to develop in small places with technology. If the central state agency (such as tax bureaucracy) disappeared, the public needed consent from the public to govern, like medieval Europe. When the Chinese institution is strong like China and the Middle East, consent is not so much, and the dictatorship is more likely.
The author will then explore the transition to modern democracy from the beginning. It is first in the United Kingdom and the United States, indicating that modern democracy has made an effort to combine the mass control and a large -scale territorial nation. Democracy is an experiment developed around the world over time, and its transformation is progressing.
In the growing democratic anxiety, the “decline and rise of democracy” provides a surprising lesson to everyone who cares about governance, expanding historic lenses on the growth of political organizations.
David Stasavage is an American politician known for his job on democracy and political economy. He is the Director of Social Science, Professor Julius Silver of the Faculty of Political Science at New York University, and a professor of the NYU Law.
He uses both the current data and historical data to investigate the long -term trend in the development of national institutions. He also publish many articles on these and related topics.
SS/SAB