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An erstwhile colleague of Mr UD’s…

… really calls it on Libya:

… Written off not long ago as an implacable despot, Gaddafi is a complex and adaptive thinker as well as an efficient, if laid-back, autocrat. Unlike almost any other Arab ruler, he has exhibited an extraordinary capacity to rethink his country’s role in a changed and changing world.

… Surprisingly flexible and pragmatic, Gaddafi was once an ardent socialist who now acknowledges private property and capital as sometimes appropriate elements in developing societies. Once an opponent of representative central government, he is wrestling with the need to delegate substantial authority to competent public officials if Libya is to join the global system.

Libya under Gaddafi has embarked on a journey that could make it the first Arab state to transition peacefully and without overt Western intervention to a stable, non-autocratic government and, in time, to an indigenous mixed constitution favoring direct democracy locally and efficient government centrally.

Benjamin Barber, Washington Post, August 2007.

Some commentary at the time. (The writer quotes Marc Lynch, a colleague of UD‘s at George Washington University.)

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In October 2008, Barber called Gaddafi “a poet of democracy.”

Margaret Soltan, February 25, 2011 3:51PM
Posted in: professors

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