Pitfalls in the Study of Democratization: Testing the Emancipatory Theory of Democracy

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Pitfalls in the Study of Democratization: Testing the Emancipatory Theory of Democracy. / Welzel, Christian; Inglehart, Ronald; Kruse, Stefan.
1. ed. World Values Survey Association, 2016. (World Values Research; Vol. 8, No. 1).

Research output: Working paperWorking papers

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Welzel C, Inglehart R, Kruse S. Pitfalls in the Study of Democratization: Testing the Emancipatory Theory of Democracy. 1 ed. World Values Survey Association. 2016. (World Values Research; 1).

Bibtex

@techreport{b0735fac70564222a9b8d1e9b7071b9c,
title = "Pitfalls in the Study of Democratization: Testing the Emancipatory Theory of Democracy",
abstract = "Dahlum and Knutsen (2015) claim to disprove the emancipatory theory of democracy proposed by Inglehart and Welzel. This theory posits that rising emancipative values are a major force driving the emergence and flourishing of democracies. Dahlum and Knutsen believe to falsify this claim by running panel regressions over a time-pooled cross-sectional database. Contrary to their claims, our re-analysis demonstrates that this type of regression analysis is inherently incapable to capture co-evolutionary dynamics that follow a {"}tectonic tension/eruption{"} model: rising emancipative values bring mass demands for democratic freedoms into a slowly growing tension with stagnant supplies of them, until a point is reached at which eruptive regime changes shift the supplies into equlibrium with the demands. We present fresh evidence showing that reality strongly conforms to this model, whose logic is beyond the comprehension of panel regressions. We conclude that the evidence supports the emancipatory theory of democracy as powerfully as it did in Inglehart and Welzel{\textquoteright}s (2005) original analyses.",
keywords = "Politics, emancipative values, democratic freedoms, democratization, Gender and Diversity",
author = "Christian Welzel and Ronald Inglehart and Stefan Kruse",
year = "2016",
language = "English",
volume = "8",
series = "World Values Research",
publisher = "World Values Survey Association",
number = "1",
edition = "1",
type = "WorkingPaper",
institution = "World Values Survey Association",

}

RIS

TY - UNPB

T1 - Pitfalls in the Study of Democratization

T2 - Testing the Emancipatory Theory of Democracy

AU - Welzel, Christian

AU - Inglehart, Ronald

AU - Kruse, Stefan

PY - 2016

Y1 - 2016

N2 - Dahlum and Knutsen (2015) claim to disprove the emancipatory theory of democracy proposed by Inglehart and Welzel. This theory posits that rising emancipative values are a major force driving the emergence and flourishing of democracies. Dahlum and Knutsen believe to falsify this claim by running panel regressions over a time-pooled cross-sectional database. Contrary to their claims, our re-analysis demonstrates that this type of regression analysis is inherently incapable to capture co-evolutionary dynamics that follow a "tectonic tension/eruption" model: rising emancipative values bring mass demands for democratic freedoms into a slowly growing tension with stagnant supplies of them, until a point is reached at which eruptive regime changes shift the supplies into equlibrium with the demands. We present fresh evidence showing that reality strongly conforms to this model, whose logic is beyond the comprehension of panel regressions. We conclude that the evidence supports the emancipatory theory of democracy as powerfully as it did in Inglehart and Welzel’s (2005) original analyses.

AB - Dahlum and Knutsen (2015) claim to disprove the emancipatory theory of democracy proposed by Inglehart and Welzel. This theory posits that rising emancipative values are a major force driving the emergence and flourishing of democracies. Dahlum and Knutsen believe to falsify this claim by running panel regressions over a time-pooled cross-sectional database. Contrary to their claims, our re-analysis demonstrates that this type of regression analysis is inherently incapable to capture co-evolutionary dynamics that follow a "tectonic tension/eruption" model: rising emancipative values bring mass demands for democratic freedoms into a slowly growing tension with stagnant supplies of them, until a point is reached at which eruptive regime changes shift the supplies into equlibrium with the demands. We present fresh evidence showing that reality strongly conforms to this model, whose logic is beyond the comprehension of panel regressions. We conclude that the evidence supports the emancipatory theory of democracy as powerfully as it did in Inglehart and Welzel’s (2005) original analyses.

KW - Politics

KW - emancipative values

KW - democratic freedoms

KW - democratization

KW - Gender and Diversity

UR - http://www.worldvaluessurvey.org/WVSPublicationsBooks.jsp?PUB=136

M3 - Working papers

VL - 8

T3 - World Values Research

BT - Pitfalls in the Study of Democratization

PB - World Values Survey Association

ER -