Dictating the agenda The authoritarian resurgence in world politics

Alexander Cooley, 1972-

Book - 2025

"Dictating the Agenda: Authoritarian Resurgence and Influence in the World examines how authoritarian states have repurposed tools, norms, and actors previously used to promote U.S.-backed liberalism, now turning them against liberal ideas. After the Cold War, democratization appeared to signal the decline of authoritarianism, but recent developments show a significant shift. The authors introduce the concept of 'authoritarian snapback,' in which non-democratic states curb the spread of liberal ideas domestically while promoting anti-liberal norms globally. Drawing on interviews, case studies, and databases, the book demonstrates how authoritarian states challenge Western influence through media agreements, consumer boycotts,... and restrictions on foreign journalists. It also offers a fresh perspective on the shifting global political landscape and the limits of liberal influence"-- Provided by publisher.

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2nd Floor New Shelf 321.9/Cooley (NEW SHELF) Due Nov 17, 2025
Subjects
Published
New York, NY : Oxford University Press [2025]
Language
English
Main Author
Alexander Cooley, 1972- (author)
Other Authors
Alexander Dukalskis (author)
Physical Description
xvii, 291 pages : illustrations, maps ; 25 cm
Bibliography
Includes bibliographical references and index.
ISBN
9780197776360
  • List of Figures
  • List of Tables
  • Acknowledgments
  • About the Companion Website
  • Chapter 1. Introduction: Dictating the Agenda
  • What's So New About Authoritarianism Today?
  • Authoritarian Resurgence and Internal Contestation
  • Authoritarian Interconnectedness: Global Interactions Rewired
  • The Argument in Brief
  • The Plan of This Book
  • Chapter 2. The 1990s Origins and the Acceleration of Transnational Liberal Influence
  • Transnational Liberal Influence in the 1990s
  • Two Paths for Promoting Liberal Values Globally: Liberal Democratic Primacy and Transnational Activism
  • Three Hidden Assumptions of Liberal Influence
  • Efficacious Authority
  • Market Power
  • Autonomy and Political Independence
  • Taking Stock of the Unipolar Moment
  • Chapter 3. Authoritarian Resurgence and Influence in the 2020s
  • The Vulnerabilities of the 1990s Model in the Cold Light of the 2020s
  • The West Is No Longer Perceived as Best
  • Market Power Shifts Eastward
  • Questioning Embedded Autonomy and Cracking Down in Plain Sight
  • Countering Liberal Influence Globally
  • Authoritarian Learning and Emulation
  • Rewiring Global Governance
  • The Internal Demand for Illiberal Alternatives
  • The New Authoritarian Offensive: Openly Contesting Liberal Influence
  • Chapter 4. Authoritarian Snapback Explained
  • From Spiraling Toward Liberal Change to Dictating the Agenda?
  • Tactic 1: Stigmatize
  • Tactic 2: Shield
  • Tactic 3: Reframe Engagement and Set New Ground Rules
  • Tactic 4: Project Control and Influence Outward
  • Tactic 5: Dictate the Agenda
  • Coda: Transmit Success Back to Domestic Audience
  • Illustrative Example: China and Human Rights
  • Tactic 1: Stigmatize
  • Tactic 2: Shield
  • Tactic 3: Reframe Engagement and Set New Ground Rules
  • Tactic 4: Project Control and Influence Outward
  • Tactic 5: Dictate the Agenda
  • Coda: Transmit Success Back to Domestic Audience
  • Chapter 5. Reconfiguring Global Media Influence
  • Authoritarian Amplification: New Realities of Pro-Authoritarian Media
  • The Visible and Hidden Global Reach of Authoritarian Media: A Closer Look
  • Wire Services and the Proliferation of Global Con tent-Sharing Agreements
  • What Do Authoritarians Say?
  • Learning and Adapting to Be More Effective
  • The Importance of Online and Social Media
  • Authoritarian Learning and Snapback in the Global Media Sphere
  • Authoritarian Silencing: Repression of Foreign Journalists
  • The Authoritarian Restrictions on Foreign Journalists (ARFJ) Data Set
  • Conclusion: Reconfiguration and Response
  • Chapter 6. Repurposing Global Consumer Activism
  • Consumer Activism and Transnational Advocacy Movements
  • Snapback Against Liberal Campaigns, New Authoritarian Assertiveness, and Boycotts
  • Two Cases of Apparel-Related Transnational Activism and Boycotts
  • Nike and the Anti-Sweatshop Campaigns of the 1990s
  • Activism and Snapback, 2017-2022: Repression in Xinjiang, Cotton Standards, and H&M
  • Background: Repression in Xinjiang and Activist Campaigns
  • Cotton Standards, Activism, and Corporate Self-Regulation
  • H&M and Party-Supported Consumer Backlash
  • Xinjiang, Forced Labor, and the Authoritarian Snapback
  • Conclusion: Pro-Authoritarian Consumer Activism
  • Chapter 7. Harnessing Global Higher Education
  • The Ascendence of the Liberal Model in Global Higher Education
  • Indicators of Global Influence: People, Donations, and Rankings
  • Internationalization Evolving on Whose Terms?
  • The Rise of the Transnational Campus
  • The Rise of the Democratic Authoritarian Transnational Campus
  • Whose Norms and Sovereignty Are Influencing Whose?
  • Transnational Challenges
  • The Fate of Transnational Partnerships: Finances and Academic Freedom
  • Dictating the Educational Agenda: The Rise and Decline of the Central European University
  • A Liberal Education Paradigm for Central Europe
  • The Escalating Stages of Authoritarian Snapback: Orbánism and the CEU
  • External Reactions: Liberal Outrage and Illiberal Allies
  • The Global Erosion of the Liberal Education Model
  • Chapter 8. Rewriting the Playbook: Global Sports
  • Globalization and the Internationalization of Sport
  • The NBA Goes to China: But Who Changed Whom?
  • International Mega-Events and Liberal Projections
  • Authoritarian Emergence and the New Sportswashing
  • New Authoritarian Markets, New Authoritarian Partners
  • Formula One Expands Its Frontiers
  • From Speaking Out to Remaining Neutral: Voice and Protest in Global Sport
  • Protesting Beijing's Crackdowns; Snapback Against the NBA and Premier League
  • The Qatar World Cup and LGBTQ Advocacy
  • Saudi Arabia Enters the Global Arena
  • The Unfolding LIV-PGA Partnership
  • Conclusion
  • Chapter 9. Conclusion
  • Applying the Argument to Emerging Global Issues
  • The Emerging Politics of Greenwashing
  • Genderwashing
  • Governing AI
  • Where Are We Going? Liberalism, Geopolitics, and Multipolarity
  • What Should Be Done?
  • Index
Review by Kirkus Book Review

Liberal democracy in danger. Cooley, professor of political science at Barnard College, and Dukalskis, associate professor of politics and international relations at University College Dublin, open with the West's celebration of the USSR's collapse in 1989. Victory in the Cold War was hailed as a triumph of freedom, and many pundits predicted that respect for human rights and free market capitalism would become so universal that it would mark "the end of history." China was welcomed into the world economy with the universal assumption that its people would force democratic reforms, and soon-to-be-autocratic Russia, with an economy no larger than Italy's, was of little consequence. Democracies spread, national incomes rose, and few disagreed with the maxim that capitalism and prosperity required freedom. Readers will squirm when the authors describe how matters began to change. Until the beginning of this century, dictators stumbled when dealing with Western "soft power," which emphasized, besides movies and pop music, a quarrelsome liberal democracy, toleration of contradictory opinions within a nation, and opposition to injustice everywhere. No fools, they learned from their mistakes. Using a combination of modern technology and psychology (humans remain tribal; they love theirs and distrust others), old autocracies got their act together, and jingoistic right-wing movements, learning the same lessons, began thriving even in European social democracies. Once a modest threat, reformers barely exist today in the established autocracies of China, Russia, and the Middle East. Elsewhere, hypernationalistic autocrats began winning free elections decades ago, and to America's 2024 victors, "liberal" is a dirty word. No polemic, this is a sober report, dotted with statistics, graphs, and political analysis. A dispassionate argument proposing that the lights are going out. Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.