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Sometimes downhill all the way is okay

I am in Alvarenga, Portugal, a small town of just over 1000 people, about an hour and a half outside of Porto. Itโ€™s in the hilly countryside, filled with vineyards and orange and almond trees. I am with 5 other women, traveling on holidays. Thereโ€™s a big, award-winning tourist attraction nearby in the town ofโ€ฆ Continue reading Sometimes downhill all the way is okay

An Abandoned Lisbon Attic Becomes Airy Apartment With Hidden Kitchen

An Abandoned Lisbon Attic Becomes Airy Apartment With Hidden Kitchen

The 645-square-foot MARVILA ATTIC did not begin like this. Prior to KEMA studio renovating the space, it was an attic in disrepair in an old industrial area of Lisbon, Portugal. Finally, the neighborhood is undergoing a revitalization and this project is a part of it. KEMA studio transformed the unlivable attic into a bright and airy apartment with views of the nearby Tagus River.

attic apartment with slanted ceilings and built-in sofa

The renovation required a brand new roof and interior structure, leaving behind the only salvageable components, the floor structure and gable walls. A full bathroom and private entry were added to round out the spaceโ€™s function.

attic apartment with slanted ceilings and built-in sofa

To maximize the natural light and airiness of the new design, the private areas are contained in a separate volume, leaving the public space open.

attic apartment with slanted ceilings and built-in sofa and storage

attic apartment with slanted ceilings and built-in sofa

A separate volume in the living area houses storage, an embedded sofa, and the kitchen behind fluted wood panels. That leaves the remaining space as open and minimal as possible.

attic apartment with slanted ceilings and built-in sofa

angled view in attic apartment

Four new skylights and two dormer windows are added to fill the space with daylight.

pull out hidden storage unit

Thereโ€™s even hidden storage in the wall by the entry stairs, perfect for jackets and shoes.

woman walking by white wall in apartment

A window above the bedroom volume and a mirror on the back wall keeps the stairs well-lit.

modern attic apartment view into kitchen

modern attic apartment view into kitchen

Overall, the minimalist design comprises natural tones and sustainable + eco-friendly materials, like fiber cement panels, colored wood fiber panels, plywood, metal, brick tiles, and wooden floor.

modern attic apartment view into kitchen

small desk in front of window in attic apartment

renovated modern bathroom in attic apartment

renovated modern bathroom in attic apartment

renovated modern bathroom in attic apartment

renovated modern bathroom in attic apartment

renovated modern bathroom in attic apartment

closeup off cabinet storage doors

Before:

before shot of shabby apartment

before shot of shabby apartment

a brunette and blonde woman standing in white shirts

KEMA studio \\\ Photo: Agata Mendes

Photos by Alexander Bogorodskiy and Eliza Borkowska โ€“ KEMA studio.

Popular Mobilization Makes Democracy More Likely After a Coup

Guest post by Marianne Dahl and Kristian Skrede Gleditsch

Some have suggested that military coups are the best hope for removing autocratic leaders and promoting democracy. Others contend that coups are more likely to spur increased repression and new autocratic regimes, undermining hopes of democratic reform. There are certainly historical examples where coups have preceded democratic reformโ€”take for example the 1974 Carnation Revolution in Portugal. But coup attempts have also ushered in harsher autocratic rule, such as in Equatorial Guinea after 1968. The empirical record shows no clear or consistent relationship. A look at changes in Polity democracy scores, a common comparative measure of democracy and political transitions, shows that although political change is much more likely after a coup, moves towards democracy and autocracy are about equally likely.

In a recent article in the European Journal of International Relations, we argue that what happens after a coup hinges on popular mobilization. Democratic reform is more likely when coups occur in the context of popular mobilization, and autocratic entrenchment is more likely in its absence.

Considering leader incentives after coup attempts sheds light on why coups spur democratic reforms at times and autocracy at others. Both failed and successful coups leave political rulers in a challenging position. A coup reveals divisions among elites and is likely to exacerbate competition. It is often unclear who remains loyal and how much support an incumbent can count on. There is a high likelihood of new coup attempts, and rulers challenged by a coup are more likely to be exiled, jailed, or executed.

Rulers can respond to these challenges in different ways. They can try to annihilate threats or repress opposition. Increasing control through repression and purges is often an autocratโ€™s preferred response. But such strategies can be fraught with risks. Potential threats can be difficult to identify, and harsh repression can backfire and fuel opposition.

An alternative strategy is to promise democratic reform. Promises of reform can help enhance a leaderโ€™s appeal, and it is difficult to claim popular consent for seizing power in a coup without promising elections. Moreover, free elections and respect for political rights are increasingly held up as conditions for avoiding economic sanctions or securing external aid. Democratic reform can also allow rulers to establish a safer exit route should things not go their way. One out of three leaders who lose power in a coup are imprisoned or killed within the next year, but only one out of fifty leaders who lose power in elections face that fate.

Whether leaders choose repression and autocracy or democracy and elections depends on the presence of popular nonviolent mobilization. Popular mobilizationโ€”public protests, sit-ins, acts of defiance to orders, and strikesโ€”decreases the viability of repressive strategies and increases revolutionary threat.

Coups reveal cracks within a regime, which popular mobilization can leverage and deepen. Further, a fractured regime is more vulnerable to popular mobilization. Divisions among elites can increase citizensโ€™ expectations of success and encourage wider participation, resulting in more effective threats. Popular mobilization therefore increases a coup leaderโ€™s incentives to promise democratic reforms. In the risky aftermath of a coup attempt, incumbents may try to reach out to a mobilized opposition or the general population to increase their popularity and contain threats from elites. In this context, democratic reforms can decrease the risk of a new coup, since coup attempts are more likely when incumbents are less popular.

By contrast, leaders who do not face threats from mass protests have fewer constraints to repress or selectively accommodate potential coup-makers and less need to seek broader support. Repressive strategies are especially likely after successful coups without mobilization because repression is easier to enact after a display of power in seizing control, with at least the tacit support of security forces. In contrast, failed coups leave an incumbent weakened, with worse prospects for consolidating power.

Of course, popular mobilization by itself can trigger political change, and coups and mobilization may have common causes. Our article, which provides systematic empirical analyses using data for the period 1950โ€“2019 on coups, mass mobilization, and changes in the level of democracy, shows that popular mobilization makes changes toward democracy more likely after a coup. In the absence of mobilization, successful coups are more likely to result in changes toward greater autocracy.

Predicted changes in polity by year since the coup attempt, outcomes, and mobilization.

Coups and political disruptions happen all over the world, and their occurrence presents an opportunity for reformโ€”towards democracy and opennessโ€”or away from democracy and towards further repression. The transition to democracy after the coup in Portugal was not a foregone conclusion, rather, popular mobilization helped steer the country toward a political transition. Although hope for a democratic transition in Sudan after the military coup ousting Bashir in 2019 was undermined by military rulers backtracking on promises, continuing protests make it more difficult to secure autocratic rule. Popular protests helped bring down the 1991 coup attempt in the Soviet Union and preceded a period of subsequent democratic opening in Russia. And if there were to be a coup against Putin, the prospects for subsequent democratic reform seem much better with popular mobilization than without.

Marianne Dahl is a senior researcher at International Peace Research Institute Oslo. Kristian Skrede Gleditsch is theย Regius Professorย ofย Political Scienceย in theย Department of Government at the University of Essex and a research associate at the Peace Research Institute Oslo.

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