
International IDEA Handbook on Democracy Assessment
David Beetham(Editor)
Kluwer Law International (Publisher)
1st Edition
Published on 1. November 2001
Book
Hardback
160 pages
978-90-411-1755-7 (ISBN)
Description
<i>The International IDEA Handbook on Democracy Assessment</i> is a robust and sensitive guide to assessing the quality of democracy and human rights in any country around the world. The Handbook introduces an easy-to-use and universal methodology for assessing the condition of democracy in any country, or its progress in democratisation, that has been developed in a three-year action programme at IDEA, the inter-governmental Institute for Democracy and Electoral Assistance in Sweden.
<p class=copymedium>The Handbook provides a means to measure systematically the full range of values, institutions and issues relating to modern democracy that is sensitive to the underlying principles and democracy and the differences between democracies themselves. It is therefore both universal in application and capable of responding to particular aspects of any one nation's democratic arrangements. The animating principle of the Handbook is that only citizens of a nation themselves are qualified to assess the quality of their own democratic arrangements. Thus, it provides a self-help guide, which gives academics, lawyers, political practitioners, journalists and interested citizens the tools to assess the state of their democracy, or any key aspects of their democracy.
<p class=copymedium>The Handbook is above all a practical working document that draws on the actual experience of assessing democracy in different countries, comparative knowledge and research, and democratic principles and practice. It gives a step-by-step guide to the purposes and methods of democracy assessment; who to involve; how to use the research tools; how to validate the findings; what standards of practice to adopt; and how to present and publicise a finished assessment. It contains extracts from completed assessments, guidance on the use of qualitative and quantitative data, examples of codes of democratic practice and international and regional standards, and a vast list of accessible data sources.
<p class=copymedium>The methodology was created by a team of political scientists assembled from all regions of the world by International IDEA and has been tried and tested in a variety of countries, including Bangladesh, El Salvador, Italy, Kenya, Malawi, New Zealand, Peru, South Korea and the United Kingdom. International organisations like the World Bank and UNECA are adapting it for in-country use. The four main authors and editors have been directly involved from the inception of the project - in developing and refining the methodology and participating in and advising on the nine country studies that form the essential practical core of experience on which this invaluable Handbook is based.
<p class=copymedium>The Handbook provides a means to measure systematically the full range of values, institutions and issues relating to modern democracy that is sensitive to the underlying principles and democracy and the differences between democracies themselves. It is therefore both universal in application and capable of responding to particular aspects of any one nation's democratic arrangements. The animating principle of the Handbook is that only citizens of a nation themselves are qualified to assess the quality of their own democratic arrangements. Thus, it provides a self-help guide, which gives academics, lawyers, political practitioners, journalists and interested citizens the tools to assess the state of their democracy, or any key aspects of their democracy.
<p class=copymedium>The Handbook is above all a practical working document that draws on the actual experience of assessing democracy in different countries, comparative knowledge and research, and democratic principles and practice. It gives a step-by-step guide to the purposes and methods of democracy assessment; who to involve; how to use the research tools; how to validate the findings; what standards of practice to adopt; and how to present and publicise a finished assessment. It contains extracts from completed assessments, guidance on the use of qualitative and quantitative data, examples of codes of democratic practice and international and regional standards, and a vast list of accessible data sources.
<p class=copymedium>The methodology was created by a team of political scientists assembled from all regions of the world by International IDEA and has been tried and tested in a variety of countries, including Bangladesh, El Salvador, Italy, Kenya, Malawi, New Zealand, Peru, South Korea and the United Kingdom. International organisations like the World Bank and UNECA are adapting it for in-country use. The four main authors and editors have been directly involved from the inception of the project - in developing and refining the methodology and participating in and advising on the nine country studies that form the essential practical core of experience on which this invaluable Handbook is based.
More details
Language
English
Place of publication
Zuidpoolsingel
Netherlands
Target group
College/higher education
Professional and scholarly
Research
Dimensions
Height: 305 mm
Width: 203 mm
Thickness: 0 mm
Weight
761 gr
ISBN-13
978-90-411-1755-7 (9789041117557)
Schweitzer Classification
Content
<ol class=copymedium>Contributors
Acknowledgements
Abbreviations
Foreword; B. Säve-Söderbergh
Introduction
<p class=copymedium>Part 1: Explaining the Method
The IDEA framework and other assessment methodologies
Explaining the Assessment Framework
From Democratic Principles to Mediating Values and Institutions
What the Framework Assesses
Charting the Process of Assessment
Strategies for Making Democracy Assessments Public
<p class=copymedium>Part 2: Democracy Assessment in Practice
Examples of Democracy Assessments
Assessing Accountability: the Use of Qualitative Tables
Measuring Democratic Progress: the Use of Quantitative Information
Codes of Good Practice
<p class=copymedium>Part 3: The Assessment Framework
Full List of Search Questions
The Assessment Framework: Four Columns
Search Questions
Relevant Evidence and Data
Sources of Data
Possible International Standards for Assessment
Preliminary Data
Citizenship, Law and Rights
<p class=copymedium><li class=copymedium>Nationhood and Citizenship <li class=copymedium>The Rule of Law and Access to Justice <li class=copymedium>Civil and Political Rights <li class=copymedium>Economic and Social Rights. Representative and Accountable Government <li class=copymedium>Free and Fair Elections <li class=copymedium>Democratic Role of Political Parties <li class=copymedium>Government Effectiveness and Accountability <li class=copymedium>Civilian Control of the Military and Police <li class=copymedium>Minimising Corruption. Civil Society and Popular Participation <li class=copymedium>The Media in a Democratic Society <li class=copymedium>Political Participation <li class=copymedium>Government Responsiveness <li class=copymedium>Decentralisation. Democracy Beyond the State <li class=copymedium>International Dimensions of Democracy</ol>
Appendix
Tables and Boxes
Abbreviations
About the Authors</ol>
Acknowledgements
Abbreviations
Foreword; B. Säve-Söderbergh
Introduction
<p class=copymedium>Part 1: Explaining the Method
The IDEA framework and other assessment methodologies
Explaining the Assessment Framework
From Democratic Principles to Mediating Values and Institutions
What the Framework Assesses
Charting the Process of Assessment
Strategies for Making Democracy Assessments Public
<p class=copymedium>Part 2: Democracy Assessment in Practice
Examples of Democracy Assessments
Assessing Accountability: the Use of Qualitative Tables
Measuring Democratic Progress: the Use of Quantitative Information
Codes of Good Practice
<p class=copymedium>Part 3: The Assessment Framework
Full List of Search Questions
The Assessment Framework: Four Columns
Search Questions
Relevant Evidence and Data
Sources of Data
Possible International Standards for Assessment
Preliminary Data
Citizenship, Law and Rights
<p class=copymedium><li class=copymedium>Nationhood and Citizenship <li class=copymedium>The Rule of Law and Access to Justice <li class=copymedium>Civil and Political Rights <li class=copymedium>Economic and Social Rights. Representative and Accountable Government <li class=copymedium>Free and Fair Elections <li class=copymedium>Democratic Role of Political Parties <li class=copymedium>Government Effectiveness and Accountability <li class=copymedium>Civilian Control of the Military and Police <li class=copymedium>Minimising Corruption. Civil Society and Popular Participation <li class=copymedium>The Media in a Democratic Society <li class=copymedium>Political Participation <li class=copymedium>Government Responsiveness <li class=copymedium>Decentralisation. Democracy Beyond the State <li class=copymedium>International Dimensions of Democracy</ol>
Appendix
Tables and Boxes
Abbreviations
About the Authors</ol>