Lecture by Johannes Gerschewski at Tulane University: Murphy Seminar in Political Science

Mo. September 16, 2024
Location: Tulane University (6823 St. Charles Avenue New Orleans, LA 70118)

Room #210, McKeever, LBC | Tulane University

As part of his 2024 Thomas Mann Fellowship, Johannes Geschewski will present material from his recent book, The Two Logics of Autocratic Rule (2023), at the Murphy Seminar in Political Science.

 

 

Information

In his book, Gerschewski argues that all autocracies must fulfil three conditions to survive: the co-optation of key elites into their inner sanctum, the repression of potential dissent, and popular legitimation. Yet, how these conditions complement each other depends on alternative logics: over-politicization and de-politicization. While the former aims at mobilizing people via inflating a friend-foe distinction, the latter renders the people passive and apathetic, relying instead on performance-driven forms of legitimation. Gerschewski supports this two-logics theory with the empirical analysis of forty-five autocratic regime episodes in East Asia since the end of World War II.
 
Find more information here.

 

 

Participant

Johannes Gerschewski
Johannes Gerschewski | Image: David Ausserhofer

Johannes Gerschewski is a research fellow at the WZB Berlin Social Science Center and coordinates the work of the Theory Network at the Cluster of Excellence “Contestations of the Liberal Script (SCRIPTS).” He has published in academic journals including American Political Science Review, Perspectives on Politics, and Comparative Political Studies. His book on The Two Logics of Autocratic Rule was published in April 2023 by Cambridge University Press.

Partner

The talk is organized with Tulane University.