Books on authoritarianism, Russia, China, NK, democratic backsliding, etc.?

By MichaelA🔸 @ 2021-02-02T03:52 (+14)

I’m interested in learning more about authoritarianism, specific (arguably) authoritarian regimes (especially China, Russia, and North Korea), democratic backsliding, the possibility of stable and/or global totalitarianism, and related topics.

As such, I’d be interested in: 

(ETA: I'd also be interested in recommendations of online courses or lecture series on these topics.)

I imagine such a collection could be useful for other people too. I’ll also share the relevant books and links that I know about already. (One type of book I don’t already know of examples of is biographies of relevant political leaders; please feel free to recommend some biographies of that kind!)

The cluster of topics I’m pointing to is intentionally broad. If you’re not sure whether a book/link is relevant enough, please mention it anyway, and just say something about what the book/link seems relevant to. 

(See also Books / book reviews on nuclear risk, WMDs, great power war? and Collection of sources related to dystopias and "robust totalitarianism".)


jlemien @ 2021-02-14T07:50 (+6)

I'm fairly focused on China (studied China in university, speak Mandarin, live in China, read about 50 books on/about China during the past 10 years).

While there are plenty of books that can give you a general feel or a broad understanding of some trends in society (Age of Ambition: Chasing Fortune, Truth, and Faith in the New China, China in Ten Words, China's Millennials: The Want Generation), and there are a few books regarding specific parts of the government/policy (The Party: The Secret World of China's Communist Rulers, Out of Mao's Shadow: The Struggle for the Soul of a New China, Wealth and Power: China's Long March to the Twenty-first Century, When A Billion Chinese Jump: How China Will Save Mankind Or Destroy It
), I don't know of many books that are focusing specifically on authoritarianism. I suspect that there are quite a few journal articles from political science scholars who focus on Chinese government/governance.

One assumption I have here is that you only/primarily would read in English. If you can read in Chinese, then there is a far more vast swath of literature available from Hong Kong and from Taiwan about China.

MichaelA @ 2021-02-15T02:46 (+2)

Thanks for these recommendations and comments!

In case the following info is useful to other readers: 

The Party sounds quite relevant to my interests, so I expect I'll read that in the coming months, and maybe later Out of Mao's Shadow and/or China in Ten Words. I already read Age of Ambition and found it interesting.

And yes, unfortunately I can only read and speak English.

MichaelA @ 2021-02-02T03:57 (+6)

Books I’ve read that relevant to things like the possibility of stable and/or global totalitarianism

Novels:

kokotajlod @ 2021-02-02T09:18 (+5)

One point in favor of 1984 and Animal Farm is that Orwell was intimitely familiar with real-life totalitarian regimes, having fought for the communists in Spain etc. His writing is more credible IMO because he's criticizing the side he fought for rather than the side he fought against. (I mean, he's criticizing both, for sure--his critiques apply equally to fascism--but most authors who warn us of dystopian futures are warning us against their outgroup, so to speak, whereas Orwell is warning us against what used to be his ingroup.)

Mauricio @ 2021-02-03T01:07 (+5)

Thanks! Also interested in this.

This syllabus on authoritarian politics might be useful. I found these parts especially interesting (some are papers rather than books, but hopefully close enough):

Also:

MichaelA @ 2021-02-03T02:34 (+2)

Thanks Mauricio!

Those do sound interesting.

The mention of that Acemoglu and Robinson book also reminds me that I've had Why Nations Fail on my list of books to maybe read for a while. Since Why Nations Fail is relatively "iconic", sounds probably at least somewhat relevant to this cluster of topics, and is available as an audiobook, I'll probably give that a listen in the coming months.

MichaelA @ 2021-02-02T03:54 (+5)

Books I’ve read that are relevant to things like authoritarianism generally (not just one or two specific regimes), democratic backsliding, etc.

MichaelA @ 2021-02-02T03:56 (+4)

Books I’ve read that are relevant to China

I also recently started the free online course Chinese Politics Part 1 – China and Political Science, which was recommended to me by another EA. I’m not far enough into it to be able to recommend it myself. (I’m intending to just watch the videos during some mealtimes and do the quizzes, skipping the assignments and certificate.)

As for books I haven’t read (at least not yet), Darius Meisner wrote elsewhere:

On the rise of China (relevant to Great Power Competition), I have found it interesting to read Superpower Interrupted: The Chinese History of the World by Michael Schuman. However, I am not too excited to recommend it, because the great majority of the book covers developments in ancient China for which the level of "insights per page" was fairly low for me.

jablevine @ 2021-02-03T12:23 (+3)

(One type of book I don’t already know of examples of is biographies of relevant political leaders; please feel free to recommend some biographies of that kind!)

Regarding Xi, there is a surprising lack of substantive biographies. See here for some recommendations of article-length profiles.

MichaelA @ 2021-02-13T10:26 (+2)

Thanks! I found that article - and the two podcast episodes it linked to - quite interesting, and would now recommend them to others too. 

(I find it much easier to find spare time for learning with my ears than with my eyes, so I'm skipping the other linked articles, at least for now. Though I do plan to see if Pocket can help me get regular articles into my ears as well.)

MichaelA @ 2021-02-02T03:55 (+4)

Books[1] I’ve read that are relevant to things like the Soviet Union or Russia

[1] Well, just "book", really - hence the request for recommendations!

Mauricio @ 2021-03-16T06:23 (+3)

Also, here's a reading list on democratic backsliding, recently posted as a comment by Haydn Belfield.

MichaelA @ 2021-03-16T06:42 (+3)

Thanks! I appreciate comments like this, which just quickly tie different related things together and keep things organised/centralised.

Louis_Dixon @ 2021-02-02T23:59 (+3)

Timothy Snyder is an academic looking at this question who has written several books on the topic, e.g. this and this

MichaelA @ 2021-02-20T06:40 (+2)

I also just stumbled upon your review and notes on the book How Democracy Ends, and found the review and notes interesting, so that book is now also on my list of things to consider reading. So thanks for that post :)

MichaelA @ 2021-02-03T01:44 (+2)

Thanks! Both books do sound interesting. 

Though the author's Wikipedia page and the Wikipedia page for The Road to Unfreedom seem to suggest the author often gets mixed/negative reviews from other scholars. But it's hard to say what to make of that without more thoroughly checking the ratio of positive to negative reviews or actually reading the reviews. And I guess he's writing on unusually controversy-prone topics.

I think I'll listen to the On Tyranny audiobook (since it's under 2 hours), and watch a talk from him on The Road to Unfreedom, and decide after that whether it's worth reading the full latter book or another book by him.

an academic looking at this question

I assume you mean he's looking at the topics I pointed to other than the risk of stable and/or global authoritarianism? Or do you also know of work he's done that seems to have that specifically in mind in a level-headed way? (I say "in a level-headed way" because I'd guess some authors will say things that sound like they're about stable and/or global authoritarianism but aren't really thought through much, and are more like hyperbole.)

Louis_Dixon @ 2021-02-03T09:03 (+3)

Yeah I haven't read any of his stuff, just mentioning that he works on totalitarianism and authoritarianism. Not having read The Road to Unfreedom, it looks like he identifies trends in several geographies which could be useful for the questions you're looking at. 

MichaelA @ 2021-02-13T10:40 (+2)

In case this info is useful to future readers: 

  • I've now listened to On Tyranny and watched a 1-hour lecture from Snyder called "The Road to Unfreedom" (so presumably similar content to the book). 
  • It seemed to me that most of what Snyder said was either stuff I already knew, stuff that seemed kind-of obvious or platitude-like, or stuff I was skeptical of
    • This might be partly due to the book On Tyranny being under 2 hours and the talk being just 1 hour, such that Snyder opted to just give a quick overview of the "basics" of certain things
    • So I do think this might be fairly useful per minute for someone who knew quite little about things like Hitler and the Soviet Union
    • But I wouldn't strongly recommend these books, and would probably recommend against them for people who already know a decent amount about these topics
      • Though I should again note that I haven't actually read The Road to Unfreedom; maybe the book version is better than both the talk and the other book
Louis_Dixon @ 2021-02-03T00:00 (+1)

There's also a chapter in Global Catastrophic Risks on the topic, though I forget who wrote it

MichaelA @ 2021-02-03T01:45 (+2)

I imagine what you have in mind is Caplan's chapter on The Totalitarian Threat, which I mentioned in another comment. I'd definitely recommend that to people who haven't read it and are interested in this bundle of topics.

Ram Aditya @ 2022-08-31T05:12 (+1)

I think 'How Democracies Die' is a pretty acclaimed book that seems relevant.