Affiliation:
1. Department of Political Science at The Hebrew University of Jerusalem,
2. Maggie Publishers, Department of Political Science at The Hebrew University of Jerusalem,
Abstract
Most studies of democratic stability are based within either the socioeconomic or the politico-institutional tradition, but usually not on both. This article combines the two approaches. In all, 11 variables associated with democratic stability are divided into four groups (institutional, societal, mediating, and extraneous) and examined in 30 cases of democratic collapse and 32 cases of stable democracies. Five variables prove to be the most influential on the fate of democracies. When a country scores negatively on four of these five variables it is almost doomed to collapse. Some of the variables prove to be correlated in an opposite way to that which has been suggested in the literature.
Subject
Political Science and International Relations,Sociology and Political Science
Cited by
44 articles.
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