Autocracy no longer needs armies to cross borders. It travels through algorithms, legislation, and the quiet capture of courts.
Democracy does not always fall at gunpoint. More often, in the twenty-first century, it is eroded from within — by elected leaders who exploit the very institutions they were chosen to protect, and by foreign powers who quietly supply the tools, the financing, and the ideological cover to accelerate that erosion. What has emerged is not a conspiracy in the classical sense, but something more durable and more dangerous: a transnational architecture of autocratic influence, operating across borders with increasing sophistication and impunity.
Networks against the Light traces the anatomy of this architecture. It examines how Russia and China — the two dominant "authoritarian gravity centres" of the contemporary era — have developed divergent but complementary strategies for weakening democratic governance abroad. Russia exports disinformation, electoral interference, and paramilitary force, eroding the legitimacy of democratic institutions by flooding public discourse with manufactured doubt. China exports infrastructure, surveillance technology, and development assistance — binding governments through economic dependency while disseminating the digital tools of population control that have made its domestic authoritarianism so effective. Together and separately, their influence has contributed to a measurable global democratic recession, with Freedom House recording consecutive years of democratic decline across more than sixty countries.
Kian Tate
A policy wonk immersed in financial upheavals, authoring self-help decision aids, business risk management guides, and histories of banking reforms from crises to stability.
transnational authoritarianism democratic backsliding autocracy promotion Russia China influence illiberal democracy Orban Hungary election interference geopolitics