Meanings of democracy: mapping lay perceptions on scholarly norms
Autor: | Christian Welzel |
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Rok vydání: | 2021 |
Předmět: |
Sociology and Political Science
media_common.quotation_subject 05 social sciences Comparative politics Assemblage (composition) Context (language use) Democracy 0506 political science Epistemology Style (sociolinguistics) Brainstorming Culture theory Honor 0502 economics and business 050602 political science & public administration Sociology 050207 economics media_common |
Zdroj: | Zeitschrift für Vergleichende Politikwissenschaft. 15:107-118 |
ISSN: | 1865-2654 1865-2646 |
Popis: | I am grateful for the honor to write this comment because it gave me the opportunity to read this truly exquisite compilation of works collected under the editorship of Osterberg-Kaufmann, Stark and Mohamad-Klotzbach. The focus of the special section is on new frontiers in the empirical investigation of citizens’ subjective understandings of democracy. It is a methodologically and phenomenologically diverse, and yet thematically cohesive, assemblage of studies that comes at due time and in which the various pieces indeed speak to each other. The compendium covers a significant portion of the innovations going on in the field of measuring lay perceptions of democracy across cultures.To me, the key point is how lay perceptions of democracy map on scholarly norms and where and why mismatches between lay perceptions and scholarly norms exist and what the implications of such mismatches are in terms of global regime-culture coevolution. My comments to the individual articles in the special issue are framed within this broader question. I am phrasing my reflections in a more brainstorming manner, rather than systematically going through each contribution in a point-by-point style. For this reason, my discussion will not address each contribution equally but rather in terms of what I feel should loom large on our research agenda. In a nutshell, I am advocating a decidedly cultural theory of autocracy-vs-democracy—cultural in the sense that we need to triangulate people’s support for and their notions of democracy in the context of encultured values. |
Databáze: | OpenAIRE |
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