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RESEARCH PRODUCT
The role of collective action for the emergence and consolidation of democracy
Paolo Li DonniMaria Francesca Marinosubject
media_common.quotation_subject05 social sciencesCollective actionDemocracyDemocracy0506 political scienceLarge sampleElitesPoliticsConsolidation (business)Political economy0502 economics and business050602 political science & public administrationEconomics050207 economicsCollective actionGeneral Economics Econometrics and Financemedia_commondescription
AbstractThe role of citizens' collective action for the emergence and consolidation of democracy is generally analysed within bottom-up theories. However, top-down theories show that elites might impede or promote both democracy and collective action through a set of strategies which are often unobserved and vary over time. Democratic persistence and change require then to be assessed in a dynamic framework which considers both citizens and elites' strategies. For such reason, on a large sample of countries in the period 1971–2014, we jointly estimate the probability of collective action and democracy using a Structural Dynamic Model. This allows us to account for the dynamic nature of the two political phenomena under investigation by controlling for their persistence, for initial conditions and time-varying unobserved heterogeneity. We find that collective action matters for the emergence of democracy but not for its consolidation which seems to be related to more structural economic factors.
year | journal | country | edition | language |
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2020-06-16 |