Why No Democracy in the Arab-Muslim World? The Importance of Temple Financing and Tax Farming
Abstract
The absence of a single democracy in the Arab-Muslim world has become a “striking
anomaly” for scholars of democratization. The lack of democratization in this part of
the world cannot be seen as caused religion as such since there are by now several
states with a majority of Muslims that have become democracies. Several other
explanations such as values, culture, economic development, rulers’ access to natural
resources or the history of colonialism have been refuted. We present a novel
explanation for this puzzle that is based on historical variations in “temple financing”.
In Northwestern Europe, religion and also secular services managed by local religious
institutions have been financed “from below” creating local systems for semidemocratic
representation, transparency and accountability. In the Arab-Muslim
region, religion and local secular services have been financed “from above” by private
foundations that have lacked systems for representation and accountability. It is thus
not religion, but how religion has been financed, that is the explanation for the lack of
democracy in the Arab-Muslim world.
Link to web site
http://qog.pol.gu.se/digitalAssets/1350/1350187_2010_24_rothstein_broms.pdf
View/ Open
Date
2010-12Author
Rothstein, Bo
Broms, Rasmus
ISSN
1653-8919
Series/Report no.
Working Papers
2010:24
Language
eng