Press release

Citizens’ tool for checking the health of their democracies

Posted: 2008-11-13

A week after Americans demonstrated the empowering potential of democracy by electing their first African American President a new guide is being published to help people around the world conduct a health checks on their own governments and institutions. It has been developed by International IDEA and is launched at a seminar in New York on 13 November 2008.

The methodology has already been used by countries as diverse as Australia, New Zealand and Bosnia Herzegovina to scrutinise the way their governments operate and draw up ways of making them more democratic. Assessing the Quality of Democracy: A Practical Guide draws from experience around the world to provide a framework that can be adapted to apply to institutions in a variety of local contexts. It is supported by a website offering links to previous examples, further information and expert advice.

One country that has used this tool is Mongolia, whose previous history of government suggested it was ‘least likely’ to move towards internationally accepted models of democracy. As stated in the Mongolia assessment report: “The national research team decided to use IDEA’s State of Democracy Assessment framework as it was deemed to be the most appropriate method for developing democratic governance indicators for Mongolia.” H.E. Ms. Ochir Enkhtsetseg, Permanent Representative of Mongolia to the United Nations, will be at the New York launch to share lessons learned from assessing the State of Democracy in Mongolia.

The Guide will appeal to grass roots activists and others in and outside government as a user-friendly resource to help them build democratic institutions that work effectively, in tune with local temperaments and conditions. International IDEA also highlights the fact that the tool has already been successfully applied to countries as big as India, as small as El Salvador, as developed as the Netherlands and as under-developed as Malawi, supporting their point that “democracy has many stories”.

“History shows us that building democracy is a long and complex process,” says Keboitse Machangana of International IDEA. “We want these assessments to be a stage along the way. The conclusions should be shared with as many participants as possible, who can then contribute to the next step of finding and applying improvements.”

“While most governance assessment frameworks are used as tools for either aid allocation purposes or the design of initiatives in one of the various domains of the democratic governance landscape,” remarks IDEA’s Permanent Observer to the United Nations, Massimo Tommasoli, “the main point of departure for IDEA’s methodology is the local ownership of the analysis and its relevance for country-level debates for democratic reforms.”

The Guide is a detailed version and a companion to Assessing the Quality of Democracy: An Overview. Since 2000, International IDEA’s State of Democracy methodology has informed assessments in 20 countries, including some well-established democracies.

For information, please contact:

Ms. Helen Ronen
Phone: +1 212 286 1084
Email: H.Ronen@idea.int