In 1989 (and later in The End of History), Francis Fukuyama argued that the global spread of liberal democracy signaled an end point in humanitys ideological evolutionsuggesting that large-scale political alternatives had lost their appeal and revolutions were obsolete. You will explore Fukuyamas claim using course readings and your own research on revolutions since 2000.
- Summarize Fukuyama’s argument in one paragraph.
- Identify what he means by history ending (be specificthis is not the claim that events stop happening).
- Include a quote from the Fukuyama reading as evidence.
- Underline the quote.
- Do some brief internet research to find a political revolution that has occurred since 2000.
- Identify the country where it occurred, what triggered the uprising, the main goals of the participants, and what changed afterwards. Also determine whether the movement aimed at instituting a liberal democracy, or some other form of government (socialism etc).
- Do not choose an event in the United States or a movement that did not at least partially achieve its goals. Please note that some of these revolutions may have been initially successful, but failed over time.
- If you are having trouble identifying a 21st century political revolution, reach out to me for help.
- Include evidence from a credible internet source (see rubric). Underline this evidence.
- Be careful about the sources that you choose in your web search. If you do not use high quality sources you will not receive full credit.
- Also note that more academic sources are worth more points. History.com or other general information sources are fine, but not worth as much.
- Remember Wikipedia is not an acceptable source. Wikipedia can be a good starting point, but you must then verify the information on reliable academic or news websites.
- Websites like “Toptenz or Ranker” are also not reliable sources. They are not written by academics or journalists. Their lists were written by freelance writers who were paid $50 per list. Here are the credentials of the author of the “Top 10 Most Notable Revolutions:”
- Include a citation for your outside research.
- You will also need a works cited with complete publication information for your outside research.
- Do not just include a hyperlink. Papers without citations will not be graded. Papers without a works cited/bibliography won’t be graded. They will be returned to you for revision. They may be resubmitted but will be considered late.
- Sample citations:
- For the bibliography: Author last name, first name. Web Page Title. Website Name. Month Day, Year. URL.
- For the in-text citation: (Author last name, Date).
- Consider whether you agree or disagree with Francis Fukuyama’s original argument based on your findings. Is liberal democracy triumphant?
- In answering this question make use of his original essay, as well as at least one of the follow up articles/interviews, AND your research. Think about how your case study of revolution applies to his theory. (SEE BELOW FOR THE READINGS)
- Refer to both articles explicitly. Use short quotes.
- If you are unsure, review the definition of liberal democracy found here:
- Underline your evidence.
- Include citations. Citations must include page numbers or timestamp. Without citations, papers will be returned to you for revision. They may be resubmitted, but will be considered late.

Leave a Reply
You must be logged in to post a comment.