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Synopsis
This remarkable volume focuses on one of the most exciting events of our time--the democratic revolution. In countries around the world, oppressive and dictatorial regimes have been overthrown and democracy is emerging as a possible, even likely, replacement. The distinguished contributors to this volume have been and still are engaged in that struggle, often at the expense of their careers, their health, and their freedom. Indeed they risk their own lives. The personal lively testimony of these courageous leaders is blended with a sturdy defense of democratic values.
Publishers Weekly
These 11 essays by civic activists and journalists from Asia, Africa and Latin America show that democracy can be nurtured in what was once called the ``Third World.'' While some of these autobiographical accounts are gripping and others too detailed, all describe courageous efforts to confront power not through politics but through institutions of civil society. Journalist Ray Ekpu of Nigeria recounts how his magazine's muckraking led riot police to occupy their offices. Educator Dette Pascual of the Philippines tells how three women drinking coffee, outraged by the dictator Ferdinand Marcos, conceived a ``school of democracy'' for ordinary citizens. Diamond, senior research fellow at the Hoover Institution, convincingly argues that wealthy countries should aid other such institutional efforts. But the book contains seeds of disagreement among proponents of democracy: Costa Rican activist Xavier Zavala Cuadra damns the ``pro-Communist forces'' in Central America without considering their grievances, while Colombian journalist Maria Jimena Duzan, describing the battle against narco-terrorism, suggests that without socioeconomic reform, democracy cannot reach poor people tempted by demagoguery. (Feb.)