Jason M. Brownlee

  • Post-doctoral Fellow 2004 -2005

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Biography

Jason Brownlee is a Postdoctoral Scholar in the Center on Democracy, Development and the Rule of Law for 2004 - 2005. His areas of interest are in regime change and regime durability; political institutions; domestic democratization movements and international democracy promotion.

His publications include:

  • "And Yet They Persist: Explaining Survival and Transition in Neopatrimonial Regimes," Studies in Comparative International Development, (November 2002)
  • "The Decline of Pluralism in Mubarak's Egypt," Journal of Democracy, (October 2002)
    Reprinted in Larry Diamond, Marc F. Plattner, and Daniel Brumberg (eds.), Islam and Democracy in the Middle East (Baltimore: John Hopkins University Press 2003)
  • "Low Tide After the Third Wave: Exploring Politics under Authoritarianism," Comparative Politics, (July 2002)

publications

Working Papers
June 2005

Imperial Designs, Empirical Dilemmas: Why Foreign-Led State Building Fails

Author(s)
cover link Imperial Designs, Empirical Dilemmas: Why Foreign-Led State Building Fails
Working Papers
October 2004

Ruling Parties and Durable Authoritarianism

Author(s)
cover link Ruling Parties and Durable Authoritarianism

In The News

Commentary

Why Nation Building Is a Known Unknowable

cover link Why Nation Building Is a Known Unknowable