by Poon Singhatiraj | Nov 21, 2023 | Northeastern University
Despite not winning Thailand’s most recent election in May 2023, Srettha Thavisin of the Pheu Thai Party (PTP) became the nation’s prime minister in August. How could someone lose at the ballot box yet still become the leader of their country? Examining Thavisin’s...
by LFELBER21@KU.EDU.TR | Jun 8, 2022 | Koç University
Cambodia’s new law regarding internet use could be a further step taken by the government to censor dissent and restrict free speech. When Cambodian Prime Minister Hun Sen signed a sub-decree on the 16th of February 2021 on the establishment of a National Internet...
by Sal Giolando | Mar 7, 2022 | Ohio State University
In December 2021, the United States held an international Summit For Democracy, inviting 100 nations to combat democratic backsliding. The invite list was full of liberal democracies but included some fairly authoritarian regimes like Iraq and the Democratic Republic...
by Elizabeth Czech | Apr 20, 2021 | Boston University
On February 1, 2021, Myanmar’s military seized power and declared a one-year state of emergency after the National League for Democracy (NLD) won a landslide victory. The military backed the opposition party in this election and claimed that widespread voter fraud led...
by Alejandro Barrera | Apr 6, 2021 | Georgia State University
Vietnam is a country with an authoritarian and non-democratic regime, led solely by the Communist Party of Vietnam (CPV). Yet, unlike other authoritarian models of governments often spearheaded by one centralized figure such as Xi Jinping in China, Vietnam’s model of...