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Serious Inquiries Only

SIO508: The Data Shows That Authoritarianism Is Very Often Successfully Reversed. Yes, Really.

Serious Inquiries Only

Thomas Smith

News, News Commentary, Politics

4.61.1K Ratings

🗓️ 31 March 2026

⏱️ 71 minutes

🧾️ Download transcript

Summary

"Yes we can" vote and protest our way out of authoritarianism.

It's a classic case of academic literature never making it to mainstream consumption. Hang around social media long enough and you'll hear that we're basically screwed. A complete fascist take over is either extremely likely, inevitable, or it's already here. And there's not much we can do about it. Unless some other country invades us, we'll be waiting for a civil war or a bloody military coup to hopefully maybe turn things around. That's what history teaches us, right?

Literally the opposite. An incredible data set that a team of thousands of academics have been assembling for over a decade provides a unique opportunity to examine these questions with fresh eyes. To look at wannabe dictators and see how many succeeded, how many eventually lost power, how democracy returned (if ever), and why. With this systematic approach, we see that strengthened democracy specifically because of authoritarian episodes is increasingly common. In fact, in the last 30 years it's the most common response to autocratization, and most often achieved by internal democratic actors. Taking this into account, events once viewed as episodes of successful stand-alone autocratization, with resistance ultimately futile, are actually better characterized as failures that caused a wave of democratic sentiment in the populace. Successful civil resistance that just took time.

Jenessa takes us through the paper that has her jumping for joy this week. Resist!

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Transcript

Click on a timestamp to play from that location

0:00.0

Hello and welcome to serious inquiries only.

0:15.8

I'm Thomas. That over there is Janessa. How are you doing today?

0:19.0

I am doing great. I am so excited to talk about

0:22.3

this topic. I've been itching to get into this paper. Yeah, yeah. This was, so this came up,

0:26.9

I think from my angle anyway, I saw you commenting on something in a thread, right,

0:32.0

and talking about this. And I thought, oh, shit. That sounds like, A, really interesting and

0:36.1

B, information I would really like to have.

0:38.7

Yeah, yeah. I have been spamming this at everyone that I can because I'm so excited about it.

0:45.4

It's just the most uplifting thing I've read in so long. I'm probably going to cry when we talk about it.

0:50.6

This is just amazing, wonderful research.

0:53.9

We need it. We need that right now. Why don't you give us a little preview? What are we talk about it. This is just amazing, wonderful research. We need it. We need that right now.

0:56.1

Why don't you give us a little preview? What are we talking about today?

0:58.6

Yeah, why don't I just briefly read you the abstract of this paper? The world is in a wave of

1:06.0

autocratization. Yet recent events in Brazil, the Maldives, and Zambia demonstrate that autocratization can be halted and reversed.

1:15.9

This article introduces, quote, U-turn as a new type of regime transformation episode in which autocratization is closely followed by and linked to subsequent democratization.

1:29.1

Drawing on earlier literature, it provides a general conceptualization and operationalization

1:34.1

of this type of episode.

1:35.9

The accompanying database provides descriptions for all 102 U-turn episodes from 1900 to

1:43.8

2023, differentiating between three types. We'll get into that.

1:48.8

A key finding is that 52% of all autocratization episodes become U-turns, which increases to 73% when focusing on the last 30 years.

1:59.6

Wow.

2:00.0

The vast majority of U-turns 90% lead to restored or even improved levels of democracy.

...

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