This episode focuses on comparisons of soft authoritarian regimes and the phenomenon of autocratic legalism. How do the uses and abuses of law play a role in dismantling liberal democracy from within and cementing authoritarian rule? Listen to hear how countries including Turkey, Hungary and the United States are using legal means to illiberal ends, and how resistance could be organized.
Guest featured in this episode:
Kim Lane Scheppele was the founding co-director of the gender studies program at the Central European University. In 2014, she received the Kalven Prize from the Law and Society Association for Scholarship, that has had an important influence on the development of social legal studies. In 2016, she was elected to the American Academy of Arts and Sciences. Currently she is working on two books. Her book, “Destroying Democracy by Law,” examines how a new generation of autocrats around the world is consolidating power using the law, or, abusing the law. The other book, titled “Hungary’s Constitutional Transformation: From Communism through Liberalism to Autocracy,”, compares the 1989 constitutional revolution in Hungary with the new constitutional order that replaced it in 2011/2012.