Logistics
Date & Time: Thursday, June 4, 2026 | 9:30AM CEST / 2:30PM ICT
Online Platform: Zoom (will be livestreamed on GDC YouTube channel)
Co-hosting Organizations: Asia Centre, Global Democracy Coalition
Livestream Details: Coming Soon!
Background
Across Asia, recent years have witnessed repeated waves of democratic mobilisation challenging authoritarian governance, corruption, elite capture, and democratic backsliding. From South Korea and Bangladesh to Sri Lanka, Indonesia, and beyond, popular movements have demonstrated the continued public demand for accountability, participation, and political change.
Yet despite moments of political rupture and democratic opening, durable democratic consolidation often remains elusive. Across the region, democratic transitions continue to face recurring patterns of institutional fragility, fragmented opposition forces, shrinking civic space, and the resilience or reconfiguration of authoritarian power.
At the same time, the nature of democratic mobilisation itself is changing. Movements today are often faster, decentralised, digitally connected, and highly visible, yet they frequently struggle to build long-term institutional continuity or sustainable political pathways once moments of mobilisation begin to fade.
Rather than focusing on individual country cases or short-term political developments, this webinar creates space to reflect on broader structural and regional questions emerging across Asia. It explores why democratic openings so often fail to translate into lasting democratic practice, what has fundamentally changed in the democratic landscape of the 2020s, and whether democratic actors may need to rethink some of the assumptions, strategies, and frameworks that have traditionally shaped democracy support efforts.
The discussion will serve as a conceptual entry point to the 2026 GDC Asia Regional Forum in Seoul, helping frame deeper conversations around democratic renewal, democratic resilience, and the evolving nature of democratic practice in the region.
Objectives
- Examine recurring patterns limiting democratic consolidation across Asia
- Explore how democratic mobilisation and political participation are evolving in the region
- Reflect on the structural tensions between democratic openings and institutional continuity
- Surface emerging questions around democratic resilience, authoritarian adaptation, and civic participation
- Generate conceptual framing and strategic questions to inform discussions at the GDC Asia Regional Forum in Seoul
Speakers / Experts Profiles
Coming soon!