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The True Clash of Civilizations
Ronald Inglehart and Pippa Norris
Democracy promotion in Islamic countries is now one of the Bush administration’s
most popular talking points. “We reject the condescending notion that
freedom will not grow in the Middle East,” Secretary of State Colin Powell
declared last December as he unveiled the White House’s new Middle East
Partnership Initiative to encourage political and economic reform in Arab countries.
Likewise, Condoleezza Rice, President George W. Bush’s national security
advisor, promised last September that the United States is committed to “the
march of freedom in the Muslim world.”
But does the Muslim world march to the beat of a different drummer? Despite
Bush’s optimistic pronouncement that there is “no clash of civilizations” when
it comes to “the common rights and needs of men and women,” others
are not so sure. Samuel Huntington’s controversial 1993 thesis – that
the cultural division between “Western Christianity” and “Orthodox
Christianity and Islam” is the new fault line for conflict – resonates
more loudly than ever since September 11. Echoing Huntington, columnist Polly
Toynbee argued in the British Guardian last November, “What binds together
a globalized force of some extremists from many continents is a united hatred
of Western values that seems to them to spring from Judeo-Christianity.” Meanwhile,
on the other side of the Atlantic, Democratic Rep. Christopher Shays of Connecticut,
after sitting through hours of testimony on US-Islamic relations on Capitol
Hill last October, testily blurted, “Why doesn’t democracy grab
hold in the Middle East? What is there about the culture and the people and
so on where democracy just doesn’t seem to be something they strive for
and work for?”
Huntington’s response would be that the Muslim world lacks the core political
values that gave birth to representative democracy in Western civilization:
separation of religious and secular authority, rule of law and social pluralism,
parliamentary institutions of representative government, and protection of
individual rights and civil liberties as the buffer between citizens and the
power of the state. This claim seems all too plausible given the failure of
electoral democracy to take root throughout the Middle East and North Africa.
According to the latest Freedom House rankings, almost two thirds of the 192
countries around the world are now electoral democracies. But among the 47
countries with a Muslim majority, only one fourth are electoral democracies – and
none of the core Arabic-speaking societies falls into this category.
Yet this circumstantial evidence does little to prove Huntington correct, since
it reveals nothing about the underlying beliefs of Muslim publics. Indeed,
there has been scant empirical evidence whether Western and Muslim societies
exhibit deeply divergent values – that is, until now. The cumulative
results of the two most recent waves of the World Values Survey (WVS), conducted
in 1995-96 and 2000-2002, provide an extensive body of relevant evidence. Based
on questionnaires that explore values and beliefs in more than 70 countries,
the WVS is an investigation of sociocultural and political change that encompasses
over 80 percent of the world’s population.
A comparison of the data yielded by these surveys in Muslim and non-Muslim
societies around the globe confirms the first claim in Huntington’s thesis:
Culture does matter – indeed, it matters a lot. Historical religious
traditions have left an enduring imprint on contemporary values. However, Huntington
is mistaken in assuming that the core clash between the West and Islam is over
political values. At this point in history, societies throughout the world
(Muslim and Judeo-Christian alike) see democracy as the best form of government.
Instead, the real fault line between the West and Islam, which Huntington’s
theory completely overlooks, concerns gender equality and sexual liberalization.
In other words, the values separating the two cultures have much more to do
with eros than demos. As younger generations in the West have gradually become
more liberal on these issues, Muslim nations have remained the most traditional
societies in the world.
This gap in values mirrors the widening economic divide between the West and
the Muslim world. Commenting on the disenfranchisement of women throughout
the Middle East, the United Nations Development Programme observed last summer
that “no society can achieve the desired state of well-being and human
development, or compete in a globalizing world, if half its people remain marginalized
and disempowered.” But this “sexual clash of civilizations” taps
into far deeper issues than how Muslim countries treat women. A society’s
commitment to gender equality and sexual liberalization proves time and again
to be the most reliable indicator of how strongly that society supports principles
of tolerance and egalitarianism. Thus, the people of the Muslim world overwhelmingly
want democracy, but democracy may not be sustainable in their societies.
Testing Huntington
Huntington argues that “ideas of individualism, liberalism, constitutionalism,
human rights, equality, liberty, the rule of law, democracy, free markets,
[and] the separation of church and state” often have little resonance
outside the West. Moreover, he holds that Western efforts to promote these
ideas provoke a violent backlash against “human rights imperialism.” To
test these propositions, we categorized the countries included in the WVS according
to the nine major contemporary civilizations, based largely on the historical
religious legacy of each society. The survey includes 22 countries representing
Western Christianity (a West European culture that also encompasses North America,
Australia, and New Zealand), 10 Central European nations (sharing a Western
Christian heritage, but which also lived under Communist rule), 11 societies
with a Muslim majority (Albania, Algeria, Azerbaijan, Bangladesh, Egypt, Indonesia,
Iran Jordan, Morocco, Pakistan, and Turkey), 12 traditionally Orthodox societies
(such as Russia and Greece), 11 predominately Catholic Latin American countries,
4 East Asian societies shaped by Sino-Confucian values, 5 sub-Saharan Africa
countries, plus Japan and India.
Despite Huntington’s claim of a clash of civilizations between the West
and the rest, the WVS reveals that, at this point in history, democracy has
an overwhelmingly positive image throughout the world. In country after country,
a clear majority of the population describes “having a democratic political
system” as either “good” or “very good.” These
results represent a dramatic change from the 1930s and 1940s, when fascist
regimes won overwhelming mass approval in many societies; and for many decades,
Communist regimes had widespread support. But in the last decade, democracy
became virtually the only political model with global appeal, no matter what
the culture. With the exception of Pakistan, most of the Muslim countries surveyed
think highly of democracy: In Albania, Egypt, Bangladesh, Azerbaijan, Indonesia,
Morocco, and Turkey, 92 to 99 percent of the public endorsed democratic institutions – a
higher proportion than in the United States (89 percent).
Yet, as heartening as these results may be, paying lip service to democracy
does not necessarily prove that people genuinely support basic democratic
norms – or
that their leaders will allow them to have democratic institutions. Although
constitutions of authoritarian states such as China profess to embrace democratic
ideals such as freedom of religion, the rulers deny it in practice. In Iran’s
2000 elections, reformist candidates captured nearly three quarters of the
seats in parliament, but a theocratic elite still holds the reins of power.
Certainly, it’s a step in the right direction if most people in a country
endorse the idea of democracy. But this sentiment needs to be complemented
by deeper underlying attitudes such as interpersonal trust and tolerance of
unpopular groups – and these values must ultimately be accepted by those
who control the army and secret police.
The WVS reveals that, even after taking into account differences in economic
and political development, support for democratic institutions is just as
strong among those living in Muslim societies as in Western (or other) societies.
For instance, a solid majority of people living in Western and Muslim countries
gives democracy high marks as the most efficient form of government, with
68
percent disagreeing with assertions that “democracies are indecisive” and “democracies
aren’t good at maintaining order.” (All other cultural regions
and countries, except East Asia and Japan, are far more critical.) And an equal
number of respondents on both sides of the civilizational divide (61 percent)
firmly reject authoritarian governance, expressing disapproval of “strong
leaders” who do not “bother with parliament and elections.” Muslim
societies display greater support for religious authorities playing an active
societal role than do Western societies. Yet this preference for religious
authorities is less a cultural division between the West and Islam than it
is a gap between the West and many other less secular societies around the
globe, especially in sub-Saharan Africa and Latin America. For instance, citizens
in some Muslim societies agree overwhelmingly with the statement that “politicians
who do not believe in God are unfit for public office” (88 percent in
Egypt, 83 percent in Iran, and 71 percent in Bangladesh), but this statement
also garners strong support in the Philippines (71 percent), Uganda (60 percent),
and Venezuela (52 percent). Even in the United States, about two fifths of
the public believes that atheists are unfit for public office.
However, when it comes to attitudes toward gender equality and sexual liberalization,
the cultural gap between Islam and the West widens into a chasm. On the matter
of equal rights and opportunities for women – measured by such questions
as whether men make better political leaders than women or whether university
education is more important for boys than for girls – Western and Muslim
countries score 82 percent and 55 percent, respectively. Muslim societies are
also distinctively less permissive toward homosexuality, abortion, and divorce.
These issues are part of a broader syndrome of tolerance, trust, political
activism, and emphasis on individual autonomy that constitutes “self-expression
values.” The extent to which a society emphasizes these self-expression
values has a surprisingly strong bearing on the emergence and survival of democratic
institutions. Among all the countries included in the WVS, support for gender
equality – a key indicator of tolerance and personal freedom – is
closely linked with a society’s level of democracy.
In every stable democracy, a majority of the public disagrees with the statement
that “men make better political leaders than women.” None of the
societies in which less than 30 percent of the public rejects this statement
(such as Jordan, Nigeria, and Belarus) is a true democracy. In China, one of
the world’s least democratic countries, a majority of the public agrees
that men make better political leaders than women, despite a party line that
has long emphasized gender equality (Mao Zedong once declared, “women,
hold up half the sky”). In practice, Chinese women occupy few positions
of real power and face widespread discrimination in the workplace. India is
a borderline case. The country is a long-standing parliamentary democracy with
an independent judiciary and civilian control of the armed forces, yet it is
also marred by a weak rule of law, arbitrary arrests, and extrajudicial killings.
The status of Indian women reflects this duality. Women’s rights are
guaranteed in the constitution, and Indira Gandhi led the nation for 15 years.
Yet domestic violence and forced prostitution remain prevalent throughout the
country, and, according to the WVS, almost 50 percent of the Indian populace
believes only men should run the government.
The way a society views homosexuality constitutes another good litmus test
of its commitment to equality. Tolerance of well-liked groups is never a
problem. But if someone wants to gauge how tolerant a nation really is, find
out which
group is the most disliked, and then ask whether members of that group should
be allowed to hold public meetings, teach in schools, and work in government.
Today, relatively few people express overt hostility toward other classes,
races, or religions, but rejection of homosexuals is widespread. In response
to a WVS question about whether homosexuality is justifiable, about half
of the world’s population say “never.” But, as is the case with
gender equality, this attitude is directly proportional to a country’s
level of democracy. Among authoritarian and quasi-democratic states, rejection
of homosexuality is deeply entrenched: 99 percent in both Egypt and Bangladesh,
94 percent in Iran, 92 percent in China, and 71 percent in India. By contrast,
these figures are much lower among respondents in stable democracies: 32 percent
in the United States, 26 percent in Canada, 25 percent in Britain, and 19 percent
in Germany.
Muslim societies are neither uniquely nor monolithically low on tolerance
toward sexual orientation and gender equality. Many of the Soviet successor
states
rank as low as most Muslim societies. However, on the whole, Muslim countries
not only lag behind the West but behind all other societies as well. Perhaps
more significant, the figures reveal the gap between the West and Islam is
even wider among younger age groups. This pattern suggests that the younger
generations in Western societies have become progressively more egalitarian
than their elders, but the younger generations in Muslim societies have remained
almost as traditional as their parents and grandparents, producing an expanding
cultural gap.
Clash of Conclusions
“
The peoples of the Islamic nations want and deserve the same freedoms and opportunities
as people in every nation,” President Bush declared in a commencement
speech at West Point last summer. He’s right. Any claim of a “clash
of civilizations” based on fundamentally different political goals held
by Western and Muslim societies represents an oversimplification of the evidence.
Support for the goal of democracy is surprisingly widespread among Muslim publics,
even among those living in authoritarian societies. Yet Huntington is correct
when he argues that cultural differences have taken on a new importance, forming
the fault lines for future conflict. Although nearly the entire world pays
lip service to democracy, there is still no global consensus on the self-expression
values – such as social tolerance, gender equality, freedom of speech,
and interpersonal trust – that are crucial to democracy. Today, these
divergent values constitute the real clash between Muslim societies and the
West.
But economic development generates changed attitudes in virtually any society.
In particular, modernization compels systematic, predictable changes in
gender roles: Industrialization brings women into the paid work force and
dramatically
reduces fertility rates. Women become literate and begin to participate
in representative government but still have far less power than men. Then,
the
post-industrial phase brings a shift toward greater gender equality as
women move into higher-status economic roles in management and gain political
influence
within elected and appointed bodies. Thus, relatively industrialized Muslim
societies such as Turkey share the same views on gender equality and sexual
liberalization as other new democracies.
Even in established democracies, changes in cultural attitudes – and
eventually, attitudes toward democracy – seem to be closely linked with
modernization. Women did not attain the right to vote in most historically
Protestant societies until about 1920, and in much of Roman Catholic Europe
until after World War II. In 1945, only 3 percent of the members of parliaments
around the world were women. In 1965, the figure rose to 8 percent, in 1985
to 12 percent, and in 2002 to 1.5 percent.
The United States cannot expect to foster democracy in the Muslim world
simply by getting countries to adopt the trappings of democratic governance,
such
as holding elections and having a parliament. Nor is it realistic to expect
that nascent democracies in the Middle East will inspire a wave of reforms
reminiscent of the velvet revolutions that swept Eastern Europe in the
final days of the Cold War. A real commitment to democratic reform will
be measured
by the willingness to commit the resources necessary to foster human development
in the Muslim world. Culture has a lasting impact on how societies evolve.
But culture does not have to be destiny. FP
-Courtesy: Foreign Policy Magazine
ABOUT THE AUTHOR
Ronald Inglehart is programme director at the Centre for Political Studies
at the University of Michigan’s Institute for Social Research and directs
the World Values Survey. Pippa Norris is the McGuire lecturer in comparative
politics at Harvard University’s John F. Kennedy School of Government.
They are the authors of Rising Tide: Gender Equality and Cultural Change Around
the World (New York: Cambridge University Press, 2003).
[Want to Know More?]
Samuel Huntington expanded his controversial 1993 article into a book, The
Clash of Civilizations and the Remaking of World Order (New York: Simon and
Schuster, 1996). Among the authors who have disputed Huntington’s claim
that Islam is incompatible with democratic values are Edward Said, who decries
the clash of civilizations thesis as an attempt to revive the “good vs.
evil” world dichotomy prevalent during the Cold War (“A Clash of
Ignorance,” The Nation, October 22, 2001); John Voll and John Esposito,
who argue that “The Muslim heritage... contains concepts that provide
a foundation for contemporary Muslims to develop authentically Muslim programmes
of democracy” (“Islam’s Democratic Essence,” Middle
East Quarterly, September 1994); and Ray Takeyh, who recounts the efforts of
contemporary Muslim scholars to legitimize democratic concepts through the
reinterpretation of Muslim texts and tradition (“Faith-Based Initiatives,”
foreign policy, November/December 2001).
An overview of the Bush administration’s Middle East Partnership Initiative,
including the complete transcript of Secretary of State Colin Powell’s
speech on political and economic reform in the Arab world, can be found on
the Web site of the US Department of State. Marina Ottaway, Thomas Carothers,
Amy Hawthorne, and Daniel Brumberg offer a stinging critique of those who believe
that toppling the Iraqi regime could unleash a democratic tsunami in the Arab
world in “Democratic Mirage in the Middle East” (Washington: Carnegie
Endowment for International Peace, 2002).
In a poll of nearly 4,000 Arabs, James Zogby found that the issue of “civil
and personal rights” earned the overall highest score when people were
asked to rank their personal priorities (What Arabs Think: Values, Beliefs
and Concerns, Washington: Zogby International, 2002). A poll available on the
Web site of the Pew Research Centre for the People and the Press (“Among
Wealthy Nations... US Stands Alone in Its Embrace of Religion,” December
19, 2002) reveals that Americans’ views on religion and faith are closer
to those living in developing nations than in developed countries.
The Web site of the World Values Survey (WVS) provides considerable information
on the survey, including background on methodology, key findings, and the text
of the questionnaires. The second iteration of the A.T. Kearney/FOREIGN POLICY
Magazine Globalization Index (“Globalization’s Last Hurrah?” FOREIGN
POLICY, January/February 2002) found a strong correlation between the WVS measure
of “subjective well-being” and a society’s level of global
integration.
>>For links to relevant Web sites, access to the FP Archive, and a comprehensive
index of related FOREIGN POLICY articles, go to www.foreignpolicy.com.
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