Some of our guinea pigs are apparently quite classic "strong men", but with a desire to deeply reshape the societies they lead [...] Others are only potential neo-authoritarians, who evolve in relatively solid or fragile democratic environments.
Yet this is only true to a certain extent. In our Summer series - and in the additional gallery that this article concludes - we juxtapose characters from very different political traditions in a disorderly manner: some of these neo-authoritarians, including Mr Xi, are authentic dictators (or even mass criminals: Assad in the first series, Kim in the second), the products of "authoritarian regimes" who thus operate in a sphere completely different to that of populism. Some of our guinea pigs - such as MBZ and MBS, or in our new series, Paul Kagame - are apparently quite classic "strong men", but with a desire to deeply reshape the societies they lead, by using methods that contrast with previous models. Others are only potential neo-authoritarians (we will leave it up to the reader to choose the names behind this label), who evolve in relatively solid or fragile democratic environments, depending on the country.
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