Y12W27VC What democracy actually needs
What makes a country a democracy? The casual answer — a country where citizens vote for their leaders — is tidy and deeply incomplete. Political scientists who have studied what actually makes democracies function, as opposed to what makes them superficially resemble democracies, have found something consistent. Voting is necessary but far from sufficient. This week's article examines what else is needed — and what happens when those conditions erode.
Core Vocabulary
erosion
/ɪˈroʊʒən/|e·ro·sion
noun
gradual wearing away
Word Breakdown: e- (out) + rosion (eating away, Latin rodere)
Word family: erode (v./n.)
Synonyms: wear, deterioration, decline
Collocations: democratic erosion, gradual erosion
norm
/nɔːrm/|norm
noun
an unwritten standard of behaviour
Word family: normal (v./n.)
Synonyms: standard, convention, practice
Collocations: democratic norms, social norms
forbearance
/fɔːrˈberəns/|for·bear·ance
noun
restraint from exercising a right
Word Breakdown: for- (away) + -bearance (endurance)
Word family: forbear (v./n.)
Synonyms: restraint, patience, tolerance
Collocations: institutional forbearance, mutual forbearance
toleration
/ˌtɑːləˈreɪʃən/|tol·er·a·tion
noun
acceptance of what one disagrees with
Word Breakdown: toler- (bear/endure) + -ation (act of)
Word family: tolerate (v./n.)
Synonyms: acceptance, endurance, allowance
Collocations: mutual toleration, political toleration
rigorously
/ˈrɪɡərəsli/|rig·or·ous·ly
adverb
with strict thoroughness
Word Breakdown: rigor- (stiffness/severity) + -ously (manner)
Word family: rigorous (v./n.)
Synonyms: strictly, thoroughly, precisely
Collocations: rigorously tested, rigorously applied
sustainable
/səˈsteɪnəbəl/|sus·tain·a·ble
adjective
able to be maintained
Word Breakdown: sustain- (hold up, Latin sustinere) + -able (capable of)
Word family: sustain (v./n.)
Synonyms: maintainable, viable, durable
Collocations: sustainable system, sustainable practice
institutional
/ˌɪnstɪˈtuːʃənəl/|in·sti·tu·tion·al
adjective
relating to formal structures
Word Breakdown: institut- (set up) + -ional (relating to)
Word family: institution (n.)
Synonyms: organizational, formal, structural
Collocations: institutional design, institutional checks
procedural
/prəˈsɛdʒərəl/|pro·ce·dur·al
adjective
relating to established methods
Word Breakdown: procedure + -al (relating to)
Word family: procedure (v./n.)
Synonyms: methodological, technical, processual
Collocations: procedural rules, procedural justice
Technical Terms
democratic backsliding
/ˌdeməˈkrætɪk/|dem·o·crat·ic
noun
the gradual erosion of democratic institutions, often within continuing elections
Synonyms: similar to the gradual erosion of democratic institutions, often within continuing elections, related concept, the gradual erosion of democratic institutions, often within continuing elections
Example: Understanding democratic backsliding is crucial in this context.
institutional forbearance
/ˌɪnstɪˈtuːʃənəl/|in·sti·tu·tion·al
noun
restraint in exercising legal power, identified as crucial by Levitsky and Ziblatt
Synonyms: similar to restraint in exercising legal power, identified as crucial by Levitsky and Ziblatt, related concept, restraint in exercising legal power, identified as crucial by Levitsky and Ziblatt
Example: Understanding institutional forbearance is crucial in this context.
mutual toleration
/ˈmjuːtʃuəl ˌtɒləˈreɪʃən/|mu·tu·al tol·er·a·tion
noun
acceptance of political opponents as legitimate
Synonyms: similar to acceptance of political opponents as legitimate, related concept, acceptance of political opponents as legitimate
Example: Understanding mutual toleration is crucial in this context.
illiberal democracy
/ɪˈlɪbərəl dɪˈmɒkrəsi/|il·lib·er·al de·moc·ra·cy
noun
regimes that hold elections while curtailing democratic norms
Synonyms: similar to regimes that hold elections while curtailing democratic norms, related concept, regimes that hold elections while curtailing democratic norms
Example: Understanding illiberal democracy is crucial in this context.
horizontal accountability
/ˌhɒrɪˈzɒntəl əˌkaʊntəˈbɪlɪti/|hor·i·zon·tal ac·count·a·bil·i·ty
noun
checks among branches of government, distinct from electoral accountability
Synonyms: similar to checks among branches of government, distinct from electoral accountability, related concept, checks among branches of government, distinct from electoral accountability
Example: Understanding horizontal accountability is crucial in this context.
Figurative Phrases
tear down
destroy deliberately — idiom; 'tear down' figurative
Etymology/Type: Metaphor from physical destruction; "tear" means to rip or forcefully destroy physical structures - applied figuratively to deliberately destroying institutions, ideas, or systems.
Synonyms: dismantle, demolish, erode deliberately
Example: Some critics argued the proposed changes would tear down the institutional norms that made democracy function.
unwritten rules
norms without formal codification — idiom; sometimes actually written
Etymology/Type: Metaphor from documentation; "written" rules exist as text, so "unwritten" rules are norms and expectations that exist but are not formally codified or recorded.
Synonyms: informal norms, tacit expectations, conventions that aren't written down
Example: The unwritten rules of the student council — never undermine a peer publicly — held the group together even in disagreement.
hollow out
remove substance while keeping form — idiom; not literal
Etymology/Type: Metaphor from food preparation; hollowing a fruit or vegetable removes its interior while keeping the shell intact - applied to removing substance or meaning while maintaining outward form.
Synonyms: gut the substance of, empty out, remove the meaning from
Example: Repeated underfunding had hollowed out the student support services until only the name remained.
check and balance
systemic counterweight — idiom; 'check' not about examination
Etymology/Type: Compound metaphor; "check" comes from accounting (a verification method) and "balance" from physical scales - applied to systems where different powers counterweight each other.
Synonyms: counterweight, limiting mechanism, institutional constraint
Example: The school's review process was designed as a check and balance — no single teacher had final authority over a student's mark.
keep the faith
sustain commitment — idiom; 'faith' secular here
Etymology/Type: Idiom from religious commitment; "faith" originally meant religious belief, but is applied figuratively to sustaining confidence or commitment to secular causes or beliefs.
Synonyms: stay committed, hold firm, maintain belief
Example: Even when progress felt slow, she kept the faith in the process, trusting that consistent effort would eventually show results.
beyond the ballot box
beyond voting — idiom; 'ballot box' physical object standing for voting
Etymology/Type: Metonymy; the ballot box stands for the entire voting process and democratic participation - "beyond" it means extending beyond formal democratic voting mechanisms.
Synonyms: beyond formal voting, outside the election, in the space of civic action
Example: The seminar argued that real democratic participation happens beyond the ballot box — in advocacy, community organising, and public debate.
Confusing Words
erosion vs erroneous
These are paronyms—they sound similar, but they mean completely different things: erosion is a gradual process of wearing away, while erroneous simply means 'wrong.'
- Erosion is the gradual wearing away, breaking down, or deterioration of something over time — usually through repeated small actions rather than one dramatic event. In the context of democracy, democratic erosion refers to the gradual, often legal, weakening of democratic institutions and norms, where bit by bit, rules are bent, checks are weakened, and safeguards erode until democracy becomes fragile.
- Erroneous means incorrect or wrong — it describes something that contains an error or is based on a mistaken belief. An erroneous statement is simply false. An erroneous assumption is a wrong one. It's about the error itself, not about change or deterioration over time.
Erosion = gradual *wearing away* (process over time). Erroneous = simply *wrong* (a state or quality).
forbearance vs forbidden
These are paronyms that look related but mean opposite things: forbearance is about restraint and holding back, while forbidden means something is not allowed or prohibited.
- Forbearance is the deliberate choice to exercise restraint — to not do something even though you have the right or power to do it. In the democratic context, institutional forbearance means that leaders have the legal power to do certain things that would help their party or agenda, but they choose not to, because doing so would damage democratic institutions. It's voluntary self-restraint for the sake of the system.
- Forbidden means prohibited or not allowed — it describes something that is banned, outlawed, or against the rules. If something is forbidden, you cannot do it; it's explicitly disallowed. The rules say no.
Forbearance = *choosing* not to do something you have the right to do. Forbidden = *not allowed* to do it at all (a rule against it).
toleration vs tolerance
These are word-family cousins with a subtle but real difference: toleration is the specific act or practice of tolerating, while tolerance is the capacity or willingness to tolerate.
- Toleration is the act or practice of tolerating something—putting up with what you disagree with, accepting it in practice. Mutual toleration in democracy means that political opponents accept each other as legitimate even while disagreeing strongly. It's the action of tolerating, the behavior, the practice.
- Tolerance is the capacity, willingness, or quality of being able to tolerate things — it's more about the internal ability or attitude. Someone with high tolerance can endure disagreement. A tolerant society has the cultural capacity to accept diversity.
Toleration = the *practice* or *action* of tolerating (what you do). Tolerance = the *capacity* or *willingness* (what you have or are like).
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