14.10.2013 18:23:00

/C O R R E C T I O N -- Journal of Democracy/

In the news release, New Looks at Egypt and Syria in Latest Issue of the Journal of Democracy, issued 14-Oct-2013 by Journal of Democracy over PR Newswire, we are advised by the organization that the first paragraph, first sentence, should read "...writes George Washington University professor Nathan Brown..." rather than "...writes Georgetown University professor Nathan Brown..." as originally issued inadvertently. The complete, corrected release follows:

New Looks at Egypt and Syria in Latest Issue of the Journal of Democracy

October issue also features Francis Fukuyama and Marc F. Plattner on governance and democracy, Pippa Norris on the quality of elections, and essays on the "Arab Spring," Paraguay, Malaysia

WASHINGTON, Oct. 14, 2013 /PRNewswire-USNewswire/ -- "The July 2013 military ouster of elected president Mohamed Morsi clearly marked the failure of Egypt's two-year attempt to realize a transition to democracy following 2011's mass uprising against authoritarian rule," writes George Washington University professor Nathan Brown in "Egypt's Failed Transition," one of five essays in the cluster "Tracking the Arab Spring."

In Syria, the outlook is darker still. "The democratic aspirations" of the massive protests held across the country in early 2011 "were among the conflict's first casualties," writes Steven Heydemann of the United States Institute of Peace in "Syria and the Future of Authoritarianism." The ongoing civil war, which has deepened sectarian divides, has "severely crippled" prospects for democracy in Syria. Heydemann notes that the "Assad regime's reconfiguration over the past two years stands out as an extreme instance of a broader phenomenon: the adaptation of Middle Eastern authoritarianism to the challenges posed by the renewal of mass politics."

In "Why the Modest Harvest?," Jason Brownlee, Tarek Masoud, and Andrew Reynolds ask why popular uprisings occurred in only some Arab states and succeeded in even fewer, while the final two essays in the cluster take stock of developments in Yemen and Libya.

Elsewhere in the issue, Francis Fukuyama and Marc F. Plattner write on Governance, Democracy and the State; Jorgen Moller and Svend-Erik Skaaning get "Inside the Numbers" to determine whether a reverse democratic wave is looming; and Matthijs Bogaards and Staffan Lindberg square off in a debate over the impact of elections on democratization in sub-Saharan Africa.

To see the complete table of contents, please visit our website at www.journalofdemocracy.org.

The Journal of Democracy is published quarterly in January, April, July, and October. Members of the press who wish to receive electronic access to the current issue should contact Brent Kallmer at brentk@ned.org. To subscribe to the Journal of Democracy, visit https://www.press.jhu.edu/cgi-bin/order.cgi?oc_id=32. For more information, please visit the Journal of Democracy online or e-mail us at jod@ned.org.

SOURCE Journal of Democracy

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