How Global Illiberalism Damages Democracy

Issue Date April 2026
Volume 37
Issue 2
Page Numbers 121-133
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As global illiberalism rises, democratic actors facing autocratization confront dwindling international support, tougher strategic dilemmas, and steeper costs for defending liberal democracy. Tools once central to democratization—such as Western linkages and international organizations—have weakened or now help to entrench illiberalism. These shifts abroad confound resistance at home: they 1) narrow and politicize international support, 2) create damaging credibility gaps, and 3) fragment democratic coalitions. Amid a deficit of liberal oxygen, historical and contemporary experiences suggest we are entering a bootstrapping era—demanding we shift our focus to how democratic resistance endures under global illiberalism through autonomous, locally anchored initiatives.

About the Authors

Maryhen Jiménez

Maryhen Jiménez is a research associate at the University of Oxford.

View all work by Maryhen Jiménez

Javier Pérez Sandoval

Javier Pérez Sandoval is a postdoctoral researcher at the Kellogg Institute for International Studies, University of Notre Dame, and a research associate at the University of Oxford.

View all work by Javier Pérez Sandoval

Timothy J. Power

Timothy J. Power is head of the Social Sciences Division and a fellow of St Antony’s College at the University of Oxford.

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