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Why Haiti Struggles

Jean-Jacques Dessalines, First Emperor of Haiti

Haiti is being called “a failed state.” Haiti was founded in 1802 when it broke away from France after a slave revolt. Throughout the 19th and 20th centuries, Haiti had a series of rulers, all of whom were dictators and most of whom were forced out by a coup. Haiti began trying democracy in the 1980s, but most elected leaders were also ousted by coup. A country naturally progresses from a dictatorship to democracy over time. Why didn’t this happen in Haiti?

The elements that help a society progress from fiefdom or dictatorship to democracy include

When these are developed and people see how rule-of-law and democracy are benefiting them, they embrace it. In Haiti’s case, however, some things hindered these elements from developing:

The result of these factors was that a mindset for rule-of-law never developed; violence remained an acceptable method of regime change; and because society never stabilized, a strongman had to remain in power to keep order.

Unfortunately, there are no shortcuts: every society has to go through an evolutionary progression, if it was not established as a democracy. The good news is that it can be accelerated. The bad news is that the first step is for one ruler to emerge from the chaos, and tragically, that’s a bloody process.

Source:

Wikipedia, “Haiti,” accessed 8 April 2024

Neil Hamblin, World Leadership, 2017

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