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  • Which are the worlds strongest democracies? - The World Economic Forum
    However, Uruguay is the only country to make it into the list of “full democracies,” at number 19 Image: Economist Intelligence Unit After achieving significant headway over the past decade, Asia’s score stagnated in 2016 (5 7), and is still lagging behind Latin America (6 3), Europe (8 4) and North America (8 6)
  • Mapped: The world’s oldest democracies - The World Economic Forum
    Democracies also have to be continuous in order to count Although France has important democratic origins, the country is currently on its fifth republic since the French Revolution, thanks to Napoleon, Vichy France, and other instances where things went sideways
  • 5 charts that show the state of global democracy in 2024
    With elections being held across the world, 2024 is shaping up to be quite the year for global democracy In fact, voters in eight of the 10 most populous countries are going to the polls this year
  • How did liberal democracies emerge? | World Economic Forum
    Since Zakaria’s piece, illiberal democracies have become more the norm than the exception By Freedom House’s count, more than 60% of the world’s countries are electoral democracies – regimes in which political parties compete and come to power in regularly scheduled elections – up from around 40% in the late 1980s But the majority
  • Does democracy boost economic growth? | World Economic Forum
    The World Economic Forum is an independent international organization committed to improving the state of the world by engaging business, political, academic and other leaders of society to shape global, regional and industry agendas Incorporated as a not-for-profit foundation in 1971, and headquartered in Geneva, Switzerland, the Forum is tied to no political, partisan or national interests
  • Why society needs to protect facts if we value democracy
    The second pillar of progress is the need for stable democracies where people and ideas can mix freely It is this free exchange of diverse perspectives that fuels the democratic process, ensuring policies are shaped by a multitude of voices and evidence, leading to informed decision-making that benefits all of society
  • More countries are now democratic than at any point since World War Two
    Among the 30 new nations formed since 1988, 17 were rated as democracies in 2016, six were autocracies, four were mixed and three were not rated due to instability or foreign intervention Polity’s democracy ratings are by no means the only ones out there, though because of differing methodologies they tell somewhat different stories
  • Lessons from history on how to understand America in 2025
    Speaking to Radio Davos at the World Economic Forum's 2025 Annual Meeting, Edgecliffe-Johnson, academic and Wall Street Journal columnist Walter Mead, and business leader and broadcaster David Rubinstein outlined how we may better understand this 20th and 21st-century superpower after the re-election of Donald Trump as the 47th US President
  • Tariffs, globalization and democracy - by economist Dani Rodrik
    “The erosion and increasing economic insecurity of the middle class is a significant underpinning of what’s happening in our democracies,” Rodrik says Indeed, he blames the erosion of the middle class as a leading cause of the significant gains made by authoritarian forces, the far right and right-wing populism across the world
  • This is how Switzerland’s direct democracy works
    The democratic roots of Switzerland travel in many directions and cross several centuries During the Renaissance, humanists striving for freedom from Rome offered different interpretations to religion that were closer to the needs of people and political independence





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