
Princeton UP Ideas Podcast David Stasavage, "The Decline and Rise of Democracy: A Global History from Antiquity to Today" (Princeton UP, 2020)
Oct 18, 2025
David Stasavage, Dean for social sciences at NYU and author of *The Decline and Rise of Democracy*, explores the multifaceted history of democracy beyond ancient Greece. He discusses how early democracies thrived in places with weak states and simple technologies. Stasavage warns that modern bureaucracies risk enabling autocratic governance. He also examines the historical significance of the Magna Carta, the evolution of political roles in matrilineal societies, and the impact of colonialism on democratic structures.
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From European Roots To Global History
- Early research on European representative institutions expanded into a global history of democracy.
- David Stasavage reframed the question to ask why democracies emerged in some regions and not others.
Bureaucracy Shapes Regime Type
- Strong centralized bureaucracies make rulers less dependent on popular consent and favor autocracy.
- China exemplifies early strong bureaucracy, while medieval Western Europe remained more consensual and weakly bureaucratic.
Sequence Determines Political Trajectory
- Sequencing matters: democracy-first societies later build bureaucracies that coexist with popular control.
- If bureaucracy comes first, rulers can govern without broad consent and centralize power.
