6533b7d7fe1ef96bd1268ff1

RESEARCH PRODUCT

The democratization process: An empirical appraisal of the role of political protest

Maria Francesca MarinoMarco CelliniPaolo Li DonniSebastiano Bavetta

subject

Economics and EconometricsDemocratization processProcess (engineering)media_common.quotation_subject05 social sciencesSample (statistics)Latent variableUnobservableDemocracy0506 political scienceDemocratic consolidationPoliticsPeaceful and violent protestUnobserved heterogeneityPolitical sciencePolitical economy0502 economics and businessPolitical Science and International Relations050602 political science & public administrationDemocratization050207 economicsmedia_common

description

Abstract This paper analyses the role of peaceful and violent protest in the democratization process. We interpret the democratization process as a sequence of phases so as to allow citizens' and elites' preferences for democracy to vary according to the particular phase that a country is experiencing. By doing so we jointly model the probability of protest and of moving through different phases of democracy taking into account time-constant and time-varying unobserved heterogeneity. In particular, we develop a multivariate finite mixture model that introduces a latent variable to capture unobservable factors. On a sample of 171 countries from 1971 to 2010, we provide evidence that protest matters in all phases of democratization, especially peaceful citizens’ demonstrations. On the contrary, violent protest has ambiguous consequences, as it favours initial democratic transitions but at the cost of threatening democratic consolidation. We also find that, after conditioning for economic and institutional controls, there is evidence of time-varying unobserved heterogeneity.

https://doi.org/10.1016/j.ejpoleco.2020.101881