The paper points out that there is hardly any research for the reverse transition, the transition from democracy to non‐democratic regimes for more than 30 years. For heuristical purposes, it provides basic data of the decline of democracy, which refers to loss of democratic quality, changes from liberal democracy to hybrid and to authoritarian regimes, during the third wave of democratisation (1974‐2008). The stocktaking shows that most of the cases of decline refer to the change in and from young democracies established during the third wave, especially after 1989. Loss of democratic quality and hybridization are the most frequent cases of decline, while the breakdown of democracy has been very rare. Young democracies and poorer countries...
The key socioeconomic indicators of Bangladesh have apparently experienced improvement since the adv...
Department of Government MSc Conflict Studies student Anan Khatib reflects on the recent public lect...
Expert claims routinely “affect, combat, refute, and negate” someone or some faction or grouping of ...
While traditional theories of legitimacy have focused on the nation‐state, authoritarian regimes and...
The effects of organized labor on regime change in developing countries are not clear‐cut. Optimists...
Only when we understand why open access is necessary can we design an implementation that is respons...
Britain’s historic referendum decision to leave the European Union can be understood as part of a br...
International sanctions have been one of the most commonly used tools of Western foreign policy in t...
available at: https://www.law.kuleuven.be/citip/blog/to-retain-or-not-to-retaina-decision-up-to-each...
We find a U‐shaped relation between happiness and religiosity in cross‐country panel data after cont...
This paper is a tentative assessment of the Rawls-Machiavelli program by Philippe Van Paris, who pro...
The paper shows that the relationship between GDP per capita and levels of specialization can be pre...
In policy debates related to innovation potential, the limited mobility from academia to industry is...
In the UK the public discourse on separated families has been rich with the stereotypes of ʹdeadbeat...
A repository used for storing and disseminating research is a canonical example of a system which st...
The key socioeconomic indicators of Bangladesh have apparently experienced improvement since the adv...
Department of Government MSc Conflict Studies student Anan Khatib reflects on the recent public lect...
Expert claims routinely “affect, combat, refute, and negate” someone or some faction or grouping of ...
While traditional theories of legitimacy have focused on the nation‐state, authoritarian regimes and...
The effects of organized labor on regime change in developing countries are not clear‐cut. Optimists...
Only when we understand why open access is necessary can we design an implementation that is respons...
Britain’s historic referendum decision to leave the European Union can be understood as part of a br...
International sanctions have been one of the most commonly used tools of Western foreign policy in t...
available at: https://www.law.kuleuven.be/citip/blog/to-retain-or-not-to-retaina-decision-up-to-each...
We find a U‐shaped relation between happiness and religiosity in cross‐country panel data after cont...
This paper is a tentative assessment of the Rawls-Machiavelli program by Philippe Van Paris, who pro...
The paper shows that the relationship between GDP per capita and levels of specialization can be pre...
In policy debates related to innovation potential, the limited mobility from academia to industry is...
In the UK the public discourse on separated families has been rich with the stereotypes of ʹdeadbeat...
A repository used for storing and disseminating research is a canonical example of a system which st...
The key socioeconomic indicators of Bangladesh have apparently experienced improvement since the adv...
Department of Government MSc Conflict Studies student Anan Khatib reflects on the recent public lect...
Expert claims routinely “affect, combat, refute, and negate” someone or some faction or grouping of ...