Democracy’s Development Dividend

Issue Date January 2021
Volume 32
Issue 1
Page Numbers 126-38
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The belief that democracy hinders development remains deeply entrenched among much of the development community. This belief persists due to a failure to update “received wisdom” as new evidence has come to light and an overreliance on a small number of authoritarian “success stories” that rarely receive the scrutiny they deserve. In addition, the contributions that democratic institutions make to development tend to be “quiet successes,” and so are easily overlooked. This makes it important for democracy-support practitioners to highlight the developmental dividends of their work, encouraging development practitioners to work with, rather than around, democratic institutions.

About the Authors

Susan Dodsworth

Susan Dodsworth is a lecturer in the School of Politics and International Studies, University of Queensland.

View all work by Susan Dodsworth

Graeme Ramshaw

Graeme Ramshaw is director of research and evaluation at the Westminster Foundation for Democracy in London.

View all work by Graeme Ramshaw