The empire of democracy | Simon Reid-Henry
"How do we understand, as it were, our era of democracy, which I argue began really as recently as the 1970s from previous eras, and what is it that is fundamentally at the core of the democracy we live in today?"
About Simon Reid-Henry
"I am a research professor at the Peace Research Institute, Oslo, an honorary professor of historical and political geography at Queen Mary, University of London, a civil society advocate and a writer. I am a 2011 Philip Leverhulme Prize Winner.
My research applies an interdisciplinary focus to the making and application of political, economic, technical and legal forms of knowledge and their consequences for political thought and practice. My work has been recognized for its methodological innovation, conceptual rigour, and empirical breadth via a number of academic fellowships and awards."
Key Points
• Democracy is not a fixed inheritance but a continually reinvented system shaped by each era’s social and institutional needs.
• The economic and political upheavals of the late 1960s and 1970s, including the collapse of Bretton Woods, set the conditions for today’s globalised democratic order.
• Modern democracy must constantly balance freedom with equality, a tension that becomes acute when growth falters or institutions erode.
• Democracy’s survival depends on active stewardship; assuming it will always muddle through risks its gradual decay.