Resumo da 4.ª Conferência de Lisboa "A Aceleração das Mudanças Globais e os impactos da pandemia"

Page 134

O

pening the discussion, Marina Costa Lobo, mentioned that we are living in interesting times, as the Chinese would put it, as we are witnessing the erosion of liberal democracy and multilateralism. We can look at the erosion of liberal democracy by considering how democratic backsliding occurs across the globe. This has been measured, for instance, by Freedom House, that published a report stating that in the last 15 years there have been consecutive declines in freedom worldwide, affecting countries like the US, Brazil or Austria. There was some debate in political science about whether this was a widespread phenomenon or not. However, we are reaching the point where it is inescapable: we are witnessing an erosion in liberal democracy and a rise of populism that accompanies this democratic backsliding. Parallel to this, we are also experiencing the erosion of the international world order, forged after World War II, and again after the collapse of the Soviet Union. While there is no single culprit for this, there are several factors that can be considered in regards to it: one is China's increasingly assertive role in the world; another is Russia's attempt to become pro-

gressively influential and to imbalance or destabilise European democracies; and finally, the third one is America's role under President Donald Trump in reneging agreements on climate change, trade, or issues like Iran, which has also contributed to the trend of the erosion of multilateralism. Given this background and taking into account the possible effects of the global pandemic on these trends, the panel started by addressing some of the causal factors that could explain the rising populism, the erosion of liberal democracy and the importance of domestic versus international factors to a certain democratic backsliding. In the West, the new order put in place after World War II, according to Sheri Berman, had two components; regional components, namely the European integration; and domestic components, meaning, the formation of social-democratic policies and compromises at the level of particular countries' political economies. At the time, all of these things were seen very explicitly by political actors, both in the US and in Europe, as part of a multi-pronged strategy designed to make democracy work in Western Europe after World War II. These political actors were very conscious of the war years' tragedy, the rise of fascism, national socialism, authoritarianism and, therefore, of how delicate and fragile democracy was. Consequently, the decline of that order has to be seen as inextricably intertwined with the problems democracy faces in Europe and the West today.

A ACELERAÇÃO DAS MUDANÇAS GLOBAIS THE ACCELERATION OF GLOBAL CHANGE

Conferência de Lisboa – 4 _ 2020 Lisbon Conference – 4

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Articles inside

Partners and Sponsors

14min
pages 197-218

Short Bios

37min
pages 177-195

Roundtable

3min
pages 172-176

The Lisbon Club

2min
page 196

Debate

13min
pages 161-171

Fernando Medina

4min
pages 157-160

Elisa Ferreira

10min
pages 153-156

The debate

23min
pages 134-144

Chloe Teevan

3min
pages 121-124

Debate

4min
pages 89-92

Katharina Pistor

6min
pages 101-104

Pedro Saleiro

4min
pages 119-120

Adrian Currie

6min
pages 79-82

Mia Couto

6min
pages 83-88

Karin Bäckstrand

6min
pages 67-72

John Ibbitson

7min
pages 39-41

Agostinho Miranda

2min
pages 57-58

Alioune Sall

6min
pages 42-46

Jennifer Layke

7min
pages 59-61

Foreword

4min
pages 7-9

The 4th Lisbon Conference

11min
pages 10-16

Debate

3min
pages 47-50

Francisco Seixas da Costa

9min
pages 26-32
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