Towards a biopolitical assessment of democracy. A case study on population, protest and war in Georgia / Alice Fraser
2025
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Title
Towards a biopolitical assessment of democracy. A case study on population, protest and war in Georgia / Alice Fraser
Author
Imprint
Venice, Italy: Global Campus of Human Rights, 2025
Language Note
English
Summary
Concerns are mounting that democracy is at risk globally. However, the definition of
democracy is contested and there is no consensus on how it should be measured. Drawing on
the theories of Foucault, Agamben and Mbembe, this thesis reconceptualises democracy
through the prism of biopolitics, foregrounding the protection, exception and governance of
bodies within national communities and nation-building processes. Using Georgia’s recent
democratic backsliding as a case study - situated between Russian imperial biopower and
wavering European liberal governmentality - the research analyses electoral developments,
populist legislation and mass protests following the 2024 parliamentary elections through a
biopolitical lens. It contends that Georgia is experiencing an exceptional typology of politics,
produced by biopolitical competition, authoritarian populist rhetoric and the spectre of the
war in Ukraine, yet not unprecedented in its revolutionary democratic history since
independence from the Soviet Union. Ultimately, the thesis proposes that democracy should be
evaluated not only through legal norms and institutional practices but through the ways in
which it governs life itself.
Keywords: democracy, democratic subversion, biopolitics, bare life, necropolitics, populism,
illiberalism, state of exception, protest, Georgia
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Record Appears in
Language
English