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@article{ Ünaldi2012,
 title = {Modern monarchs and democracy: Thailand's Bhumibol Adulyadej and Juan Carlos of Spain},
 author = {Ünaldi, Serhat},
 journal = {Journal of Current Southeast Asian Affairs},
 number = {2},
 pages = {5-34},
 volume = {31},
 year = {2012},
 issn = {1868-4882},
 urn = {https://nbn-resolving.org/urn:nbn:de:gbv:18-4-5432},
 abstract = {The history of democracy is typically a history of struggle against monarchs and other
      such autocrats. The elevation of one person over others by virtue of blood and birth
      has come to be seen as anachronistic; yet some monarchies have managed to survive
      to this day. This paper analyses two examples of the uneasy coalition between popular
      sovereignty and royal leadership that is constitutional monarchy. Whereas Juan Carlos
      of Spain has been described as having steered Spain away from dictatorship, Bhumibol
      of Thailand has come under scrutiny for allegedly lacking a principled approach to
      democracy. I argue that structural as much as personal factors influenced the ways
      in which the two monarchies were legitimised – one by positively responding to the
      modern aspirations of the king’s subjects, giving him a “forward legitimacy,” the
      other by revitalising the king’s traditional charisma and opting for “backward legitimacy.”},
 keywords = {politisches System; historische Entwicklung; politische Macht; Südostasien; democratization; Demokratie; domination; Spanien; legitimation; democracy; Thailand; political power; political system; historical development; Demokratisierung; Thailand; monarchy; Southeast Asia; Spain; Herrschaft; Legitimation; Monarchie}}