Modernization
Modernization can be interpreted as growth of a
nation in all areas (i.e. social, economic,
political), for example, the aim
is ‘development of national forms of polity,
the objects of which are to
increase the social product with fair shares for
all. Successful models now
include Japan and the Soviet Union’ (Apter 1965,
Preface). Although this
definition is outdated, as the inclusion of the Soviet
Union (no longer
in existence and with serious economic and social problems
persisting in
Russia) and Japan (also currently in a recession along with most
of Asia)
illustrates, the ideal of modernization is clear. Another approach to
the
term modernization is not to take it as an ideal but as a simple increase
in
social (literacy, numeracy), economic and political (rationalizing
beaurocracy)
standards within a given region (Marglin and Marglin 1990).
Whether this ideal
or set of standards is a natural state to which all
countries will gravitate is
the question that this essay will attempt to
answer. Is the Darwinian theory of
evolution something that can be applied to
the great animal that people know as civilization
(or the nation-state)? Is
modernization the evolution of the species on a
different level? Britain was
the first ‘modern’ nation by these standards,
in the sense that
industrialization of the country resulted in a final shift
from an agrarian
society (limited trade) to an industrial society (highly
commercial) thereby
creating a new social, economic and political state. This is
to say that the
‘instrument’ (Weiner (ed.) 1966, 7) for modernizing Britain
was
industrialization, and not that industrialization equals modernization.
The
British Empire, already being established, grew rapidly due to the
technological
innovations derived from industrialization, colonies were
established in
countries without the modern system which Britain had evolved.
Thus, it can be
derived that, British colonists who sought to establish
political, social and
economic systems to benefit the modernization of the
colony exported the ideal
of the modern nation-state to those countries
within the empire. The majority of
these colonial nations as well as those of
the other industrialized nations
gained their independence following the end
of the Second World War, and were
faced with the problem of attempting to
modernize (if that was the objective). Modernization
often requires
‘personalities’ (Apter 1965, Hunter 1969, Pye 1966), the
Elite members of
Shils’ ‘new states’ (in Geertz (ed.) 1963) sought to
create an acceptable
political system whether that took the form of one-party or
multiple-parties
by following the colonial political structures that had been
established.
These largely peasant societies were traditionally
agricultural/agrarian
based, much like those found in 15th Century Europe
(Hunter 1969, 4), thereby
making the application of established political
practices from far more
developed countries a great challenge. As a result of
this; ‘Difficulties
arise for comparative study because we have enshrined
moral principles in
models that have served well in a western political
context’ (Apter 1965,
15). After all, the global economic and political
climate found in 15th
Century Britain & Europe was markedly different to
that which surrounded
these developing nations. Therefore the impetus for
modernisation comes as
much from external forces exerted by modernised nations
as from within the
nation itself. So although, as Pye puts it, ‘Economic
achievement is, for
example, directly tied to the spirit of industry and
entrepreneurship of a
people..’ ( in Weiner (ed.) 1966, 364), nations such as
Britain and the
United States exerted pressure on the economies of developing
countries for
purposes of trade and international relations. Indeed a ‘major
goal of United
States foreign policy’ was ‘the political development’ of
Third World
countries (Wiarda 1989). Whether this political development has
actually
occurred, particularly in Africa, is a matter of great debate (Shaw
1991,
Nyang’oro 1989). The images of Ethiopia in the 1980s where famine
was
decimating the population, Rwandan civil war and ethnic cleansing, and
the
Central African Republic/Congo political leadership struggle have all
outlined
the great political, social and economic problems on the continent.
In Ethiopia
the feudal, with a few moderations, system has been the dominant
political
situation since 1941 (Gilkes 1975). The people of many countries in
Africa, even
those with strong ties to colonial powers and well-established
infrastructure
(e.g. Tanzania), may have the trappings of modern society
(e.g. Television and
Coca-Cola) without having a stable political system.
As a result of war, famine,
lack of diversification and their exploitation by
foreign powers, these nations
are in massive debt and cannot modernise their
society (hence the Cancel Third
World Debt appeal). This can surely not
be considered modernisation by the
westernised standards that are imposed
upon the term. However, it is important
to note that these same standards
would have classified the former Soviet Union
and the former Yugoslavia as
modernised political societies. With the return to
year zero in Russia (in
terms of standard of living of the vast majority, and
growth) through the
introduction of capitalist values coinciding with the
collapse of the
communist regime, this ideal of a modernised society is
shattered. Perhaps
the inevitable is mortal in that even modernity comes to an
end. Surely the
bloody warfare that continues in Yugoslavia, sanctioned by the
government,
cannot be considered an ‘authoritative allocation of values 1 for
society’
that Easton (1965) envisaged as the central function of a political
system.
Perhaps these discrepancies can be explained by the fact that it is
difficult
to separate the ‘strands of traditionalism’ in the case in study
from
‘strands of modernity’ (Apter 1985, 98). Although another argument is
perhaps
more to the point, the concept of modernity does not necessarily apply
to
those countries around whose political frameworks it was based (i.e.
The
United States and to a lesser extent the United Kingdom). To
elaborate, it
becomes necessary to adapt one’s view of the modernisation
process to a more
generalised principle whereby differing political
approaches can also lead to a
more modern nation state. Lucian Pye (1966,
117) suggested ‘think of the
countries as possessing not a single and
integrating political process but many
only loosely related political
processes’, the topic was specifically
south-east Asia but the principle is
to deal with each locality as affected by
its environment and history. Taking
this as read, then all nations will exhibit
different processes of
modernisation, depending on the internal and external
forces that create
their particular political structure. So to answering the
question, is
modernisation inevitable? Obviously the question is wholly
unanswerable
without first glimpsing the future, although a few predictions may
be made.
The modern society, as aforementioned theorists saw it in the 1960s
and
70s, may well be an unattainable goal for today’s less developed
nations. With
their independence from imperial powers these nations have
found their ability
to shape their future, whether it will be the same future
which the Europeans
and Americans reached is altogether a different matter.
The cultural,
environmental and historical differences between these nations
and the models
for modernity may be too great. Also the increased influence
of external powers
on the developing nations through tourism, communications,
trade and ideology
means that the conditions in which the modernisation of
countries like Britain
occurred are not being reproduced. Less developed
countries are not being given
sufficient time to grow in all three aspects of
modernisation. The ‘help’
which these countries have received toward the goal
of modernity has resulted,
albeit through the best of intentions, in national
debt and their
peripheralisation in a capitalist world. Thereby rendering
many nations
dependent on the developed world. However, if the model of
modernisation is not
strictly adhered to, it can be seen that countries such
as Thailand (where the
Baht went through a recent crises) and Egypt are
finding their own form of
modernity. In essence, modernity is what the
populace of a country and its
political commentators make of it. The
likelihood of all countries eventually
reaching the ultimate stage of
modernity is slim, because the evolution of the
species depends on its
adaptation to its environment. The earth does not present
a homogenous
environment, nor have the pioneering colonists created one, and so
the
chances of a homogenous polity are also slim. The modernity
which
less-developed countries reach will more than likely differ greatly
from the
idealogical viewpoint which theorists have suggested, but it will be
modernity
none the less. In summation, all nations will change whether of
their own accord
or through external pressures, and all will become more
modern in terms of
advancing their own economic, political and social
structures. So, yes,
modernisation is inevitable but ‘modernisation’ is
not.
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