Democratic Horizons: what value change reveals about the future of democracy
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In: Democratization, Vol. 28, No. 5, 04.07.2021, p. 992-1016.
Research output: Journal contributions › Journal articles › Research › peer-review
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TY - JOUR
T1 - Democratic Horizons
T2 - what value change reveals about the future of democracy
AU - Welzel, Christian
N1 - This work was supported by Russian Science Foundation [Grant Number Russian Academic Excellence Project’s 5-100’s].
PY - 2021/7/4
Y1 - 2021/7/4
N2 - Recent accounts of democratic backsliding are negligent about the cultural foundations of autocracy-vs-democracy. To bring culture back in, I demonstrate that (1) the countries’ membership in culture zones explains some 70% of the global variation in autocracy-vs-democracy and (2) that this culture-bound variation has remained astoundingly constant over time–in spite of all the trending patterns in the global distribution of regime types over the last 120 years. Furthermore, the explanatory power of culture zones over autocracy-vs-democracy roots in the cultures’ differentiation on “authoritarian-vs-emancipative values.” Against this backdrop, lasting regime turnovers happen as a corrective response to glacially accruing regime-culture misfits–driven by generational value shifts into a pre-dominantly emancipatory direction. Consequently, the backsliding of democracies into authoritarianism is limited to societies in which emancipative values remain under-developed. Contrary to the widely cited deconsolidation-thesis, the prevalent generational profile in people’s moral orientations exhibits an almost ubiquitous ascension of emancipative values that will lend more, not less, legitimacy to democracy in the future.
AB - Recent accounts of democratic backsliding are negligent about the cultural foundations of autocracy-vs-democracy. To bring culture back in, I demonstrate that (1) the countries’ membership in culture zones explains some 70% of the global variation in autocracy-vs-democracy and (2) that this culture-bound variation has remained astoundingly constant over time–in spite of all the trending patterns in the global distribution of regime types over the last 120 years. Furthermore, the explanatory power of culture zones over autocracy-vs-democracy roots in the cultures’ differentiation on “authoritarian-vs-emancipative values.” Against this backdrop, lasting regime turnovers happen as a corrective response to glacially accruing regime-culture misfits–driven by generational value shifts into a pre-dominantly emancipatory direction. Consequently, the backsliding of democracies into authoritarianism is limited to societies in which emancipative values remain under-developed. Contrary to the widely cited deconsolidation-thesis, the prevalent generational profile in people’s moral orientations exhibits an almost ubiquitous ascension of emancipative values that will lend more, not less, legitimacy to democracy in the future.
KW - autocracy
KW - Autocratization
KW - culture zones
KW - democracy
KW - emancipative values
KW - regime change
KW - Politics
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85102514462&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1080/13510347.2021.1883001
DO - 10.1080/13510347.2021.1883001
M3 - Journal articles
AN - SCOPUS:85102514462
VL - 28
SP - 992
EP - 1016
JO - Democratization
JF - Democratization
SN - 1351-0347
IS - 5
ER -