Until recently, many political scientists had believed that the stability of democracy is assured once certain threshold conditions – prosperity, democratic legitimacy, the development of a robust civil society – were attained. Democracy would then be consolidated, and remain stable. In this article we show that levels of support for democratic governance are not stable over time, even among high-income democracies, and have declined in recent years. In contrast to theories of democratic consolidation, we suggest that just as democracy can come to be “the only game in town” through processes of democratic deepening and the broad-based acceptance of democratic institutions, so too a process of democratic deconsolidation can take place as cit...
Democracy in the United States and Europe is said to be at the crossroads. I review five recent book...
In two widely discussed articles published in the Journal of Democracy over the last two years, Foa ...
Democracy is in decline – or so a growing consensus suggests. Paul Schuler sets out the evidence for...
Until recently, many political scientists had believed that the stability of democracy is assured on...
Democracy is not as stable as it once was. Confidence in the democratic system was established in th...
Are Asian democracies deconsolidating, in line with world-wide trends? This article exam...
Democracies without democrats are not sustainable. Yet, recent studies argue that Western citizens a...
Democracy is in a profound state of crisis, writes Joshua Kurlantzick, and is in retreat in many par...
Statistics from Freedom House show that 2018 is the thirteenth consecutive year with democratic decl...
Does democracy promote political instability? Research by pre-eminent scholars demonstrate how nasce...
Democracy is in decline – or so a growing consensus suggests. Paul Schuler sets out the evidence for...
The euphoria of the 1990s–that the world had entered into a new era of democracy, and that the peopl...
While it is obvious that the level of democracy will affect the quality of governance, we show that ...
By comparing results based on expert and popular surveys, this article finds that popular support fo...
Recent decades have witnessed an unprecedented expansion of democracy. During the third wave of demo...
Democracy in the United States and Europe is said to be at the crossroads. I review five recent book...
In two widely discussed articles published in the Journal of Democracy over the last two years, Foa ...
Democracy is in decline – or so a growing consensus suggests. Paul Schuler sets out the evidence for...
Until recently, many political scientists had believed that the stability of democracy is assured on...
Democracy is not as stable as it once was. Confidence in the democratic system was established in th...
Are Asian democracies deconsolidating, in line with world-wide trends? This article exam...
Democracies without democrats are not sustainable. Yet, recent studies argue that Western citizens a...
Democracy is in a profound state of crisis, writes Joshua Kurlantzick, and is in retreat in many par...
Statistics from Freedom House show that 2018 is the thirteenth consecutive year with democratic decl...
Does democracy promote political instability? Research by pre-eminent scholars demonstrate how nasce...
Democracy is in decline – or so a growing consensus suggests. Paul Schuler sets out the evidence for...
The euphoria of the 1990s–that the world had entered into a new era of democracy, and that the peopl...
While it is obvious that the level of democracy will affect the quality of governance, we show that ...
By comparing results based on expert and popular surveys, this article finds that popular support fo...
Recent decades have witnessed an unprecedented expansion of democracy. During the third wave of demo...
Democracy in the United States and Europe is said to be at the crossroads. I review five recent book...
In two widely discussed articles published in the Journal of Democracy over the last two years, Foa ...
Democracy is in decline – or so a growing consensus suggests. Paul Schuler sets out the evidence for...