• Medientyp: E-Book
  • Titel: Human development and the "explosion" of democracy: variations of regime change across 60 societies
  • Weitere Titel: Humanentwicklung und die "Explosion" der Demokratie
  • Beteiligte: Welzel, Christian [VerfasserIn]; Inglehart, Ronald [VerfasserIn]
  • Körperschaft:
  • Erschienen: Berlin, 2001
  • Erschienen in: Veröffentlichung / Wissenschaftszentrum Berlin für Sozialforschung, Forschungsschwerpunkt Sozialer Wandel, Institutionen und Vermittlungsprozesse, Abteilung Institutionen und sozialer Wandel ; Bd. 01-202
  • Umfang: 32 S.
  • Sprache: Englisch
  • Identifikator:
  • Schlagwörter: politisches System ; Bürger ; Demokratie ; politische Faktoren ; kulturelle Faktoren ; Systemveränderung ; ökonomische Faktoren ; sozialer Wandel ; internationaler Vergleich ; Demokratisierung ; Modernisierung ; Staatsform ; Einstellung
  • Entstehung:
  • Anmerkungen: Veröffentlichungsversion
  • Beschreibung: "Recently scholars identified a global 'explosion' of democracy as a sharply distinctive period within Huntington's Third Wave of democratization. So far the role of modernization has not been analyzed with particular regard to this outstanding phase of democratization. Given that modernization has economic as well as cultural aspects, we test two prominent theses. First, we test Przeworski/ Limongiżs claim that transitions to democracy do not derive from economic modernization. Using a graded measure of regime change, we present evidence to the contrary. Second, we test Inglehart's finding that modern mass attitudes play a negligable role in promoting regime change to democracy. To the contrary again, we show that one aspect of cultural modernization, mass-level liberty aspirations, has a positive impact on democratic change - even stronger than economic modernization. Third, we unfold the concept of Human Development to establish a more general argument on the causal mechanism in the modernization-democratization nexus. Our data cover 60 societies of the World Values Surveys, representing nearly 50 per cent of all regime changes in the world since 1972." (author's abstract)
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