Authors such as Daniel Lerner explicitly equated modernization with Westernization. Modernization theory both attempts to identify the social variables that contribute to social progress and development of societies and seeks to explain the process of social evolution. The theory looks at the internal factors of a country while assuming that with assistance, "traditional" countries can be brought to development in the same manner more developed countries have been. Traditional religious beliefs and cultural traits, according to the theory, usually become less important as modernization takes hold. Supposedly, instead of being dominated by tradition, societies undergoing the process of modernization typically arrive at forms of governance dictated by abstract principles. And yet, seemingly paradoxically, it also implies that human agency controls the speed and severity of modernization. That view makes critique difficult since it implies that such developments control the limits of human interaction, not vice versa. Developments such as new data technology and the need to update traditional methods in transport, communication and production make modernization necessary or at least preferable to the status quo. Proponents of modernization theory claim that modern states are wealthier and more powerful and that their citizens are freer to enjoy a higher standard of living. Modernization theory suggests that traditional societies will develop as they adopt more modern practices. Modernization refers to a model of a progressive transition from a "pre-modern" or " traditional" to a "modern" society. But the theory remains a controversial model. It made a comeback after 1991, when Francis Fukuyama wrote about the end of the Cold War as confirmation on modernization theory and more generally of universal history. Modernization theory was a dominant paradigm in the social sciences in the 1950s and 1960s, then went into a deep eclipse. The "classical" theories of modernization of the 1950s and 1960s drew on sociological analyses of Karl Marx, Emile Durkheim and a partial reading of Max Weber, and were strongly influenced by the writings of Harvard sociologist Talcott Parsons. Modernization theory is used to explain the process of modernization within societies.
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