Local Politics for Democratic Quality and Depth Lessons from South Korea

Local Politics for Democratic Quality and Depth
Lessons from South Korea

Fiona Yap is a Professor and Interim Director of the Crawford School of Public Policy, College of Asia and the Pacific. She is also a Co-Editor of the European Journal of Development Research & a Co-Editor of Asia and the Pacific Policy Studies & a Managing Editor of the Presidential-powers.net Academic blog. She also serves as an Advisory Board member of the internationally funded Korea Institute at The Australian National University, Australia.

Yap, Fionia (2021) Local Politics for Democratic Quality and Depth: Lessons from South Korea, Asia & The Pacific Policy Studies, DOI: 10.1002/app5.324.
Funding: National Research Foundation of Korea, Grant/Award Number: NRF-2018S1A3A2075531.

Set against the backdrop of economic crises and the rise of fascism that preceded the war, saw economic booms and an expanding middle class in the United States and across Europe. [i] These themes persisted through scholarship on the Third Wave of democratic transition between 1974 and 1990, with voluminous works on the relationship between democracy and economic development explaining or predicting the spread of democratization in Southern Europe, Latin America, and East and Southeast Asia, which appeared to coincide with economic growth in the 1970s and 1980s in these regions. [ii] Notably, events on the ground in the Third Wave also brought new research pursuits, such as the regional and international diffusion of democracy, the effects of democracy on economic growth, and popular support for democracy. [iii]

Unsurprisingly recent trends of democratic stalling, reversals, backsliding, and deconsolidation are driving the latest research about the quality and depth of democracy, which may be defined as the extent to which democracy in practice approximates its philosophical foundations of ‘government by the people’. [iv]

Recent studies of democracy have called attention to the need for a more robust and systematic evaluation of democratic variability, democratic consolidation, or the demise of democracy, with an emphasis on political factors that have received little attention beyond earlier generations of work.[v]

The articles in this special issue respond to these calls for new treatments. In particular, we point out the need to consider local or subnational [vi] politics and their consequences in studies of democratic quality and depth.

There are at least four reasons to study subnational politics that go beyond the prima facie case that its examination furthers understanding of democratic depth and quality. First, studies show that ‘nation fixation’, where a focus on democratic advances at the national level supplants interest in local-level politics and processes, has enabled subnational undemocratic regimes (SURs) to coexist within a national democratic framework. [vii] Thus, contrary to conventional optimism that democracy at the national level trickles down to the local level over time, studies show that democratic national-level politics may coexist with SURs because of inattention to subnational experiences. Empirically, events in East and Southeast Asia suggest such SURs. Thus, in 2016 in the Philippines, the 30th anniversary of the ouster of President Ferdinand Marcos from office in 1986 by the People Power revolution was marked by the political resurgence of the Marcoses: wife Imelda was a provincial congress representative in Ilocos Norte, daughter Imee was governor of the same province and son Ferdinand Jr. made a competitive run for the vice presidency in the 2016 elections. [viii] Such subnational political developments affect democratic variability and consolidation, despite the success of democracy at the national level. Systematic study and evaluation of local politics must complement and complete the study of national-level democracy.

Second, local politics and developments are key to political decentralization—that is, the devolution of authority from national governments to elected officials at subnational levels. The global push for political decentralization increased before the turn of the 21st century, aimed at improving government responsibility and responsiveness through citizens’ ability to show their dissatisfaction with elected representatives by removing them from office. [ix] Given the political and policy drive for political decentralization, expanding the study of political developments at the subnational level is sine qua non. This may be particularly relevant for East and Southeast Asia, where political decentralization is practiced in a majority of the non-communist, multiparty countries [x], including the Philippines, Indonesia, Malaysia, Korea, Japan, and Taiwan, where local elections are held.

Third, local-level processes and institutions affect accountability, a critical element of democratic quality. [xi] Accountability can be vertical and horizontal, where vertical accountability refers to the ability to hold governments responsible, usually evident when dissatisfied voters throw their governments out of office, and horizontal accountability characterizes the capacity of other institutions or officials to monitor and check government powers. [xii] Local-level governance may capture elements of both horizontal accountabilities, through the capacity to check excesses of the national government and vertical accountability, if voters can hold governments responsible for performance at the national and local levels. The extent to which answerability exists at the local level directly affects accountability processes and democratic quality and depth in a nation. Government accountability applies to East and Southeast Asia, where politicians have asserted the uniqueness of Asia and ‘Asian values’ to slow or stop democratic developments. [xiii] If and how government accountability is practiced at the local level, where less attention is directed, promises to be revealed.

Fourth, related to the consideration of democratic quality, the narrative of exceptionalism through ‘Asian values’ has re-emerged with the resurgence of the East Asian development model—where strong, unconstrained governments are credited with directing their economies to success by motivating or compelling their citizens’ cooperation—across less-developed countries in Asia and Africa. [xiv] While ‘Asian values’ may be particular to East and Southeast Asia, this narrative of exceptionalism is used to justify democratic slowdown in developing or less-developed countries where economic growth is prioritized. Yet, as Cha and Yap [xv] point out, systematic evidence to support exceptionalism, even in East and Southeast Asia, is absent. Examination of democratic quality and depth across local and national politics is highly relevant now, as narratives of the ‘Asian values and the East Asian development model are adopted to stymie developments toward accountability and democracy. And, it may be especially useful for East and Southeast Asia, which are emulated globally.

The articles in this special issue focus on local- and national-level politics in South Korea (hereafter referred to as Korea). With a single country case, national-level political, social, and economic variances are held constant, so that findings on local-level politics may be broadly generalizable.

Korea provides a useful study on several grounds. The country was among the original ‘Asian Tigers’, which included Taiwan, Singapore, and Hong Kong, and among the first of these Asian Tigers to transition from decades of autocratic or military-supported governments to democracy. Importantly, despite popular perceptions regarding the East Asian development model, Korea has stayed on the democratic course through economic challenges even as its contemporaries in the Third Wave democracies have struggled with backsliding. [xvi] Given this success, it pays to examine the quality and depth of Korea’s democracy.

Korea is also a country that has formally devolved power to the local level. The Local Autonomy Act was enacted in 1988—that is, immediately following Korea’s democratic transition—to pave the way for the development of local-level governments. Political decentralization followed, with the local council and local government elections instituted in 1991 and 1995, respectively. [xvii]

Finally, the 2016–2017 Candlelight Revolution—where million-strong protestors demonstrated in the capital, Seoul, and across cities in Korea against then-president Park Geun-Hye leading to the first impeachment and ouster from the office of a sitting president—underscores the considerable might of civil society, which has emerged as a critical driver of democratic transition, progress, and consolidation in the literature. [xviii] Thus, the magnitude and force of the seismic shifts in Korean politics in at least two instances—constitutional democratization in 1988 and the constitutional removal of a president from office in 2017—warrants an examination of the role of civil society in local- and national-level politics in Korea and what they mean for democratic accountability and support.

In the following sections, we briefly survey the literature on democratic studies to situate the current calls and responses for new or previously overlooked political factors in studies of democratic quality and depth. We provide overviews of the papers on this special issue and then conclude with the implications of the findings.

Examining Democratic Quality and Depth: Why and How

According to Huntington [xix], at least 30 countries pursued democratization during the Third Wave of democracy between 1974 and 1990, the largest wave to date. Democratic study flourished during this period and the decade that followed, building on pioneering works such as Lipset [xx] on the social requisites and economic foundations for democracy, and Moore [xxi] on the multiple political outcomes from transitions driven by the class conflict that is amplified by modernization. Debates on how economic performance may precipitate democracy or the primary drivers of transition—specifically, whether growth or crises led to transitions, and whether by labor, the middle class, the elites, or their conflict—drew on examples from Latin America and Southern Europe. Meanwhile, cases from East and Southeast Asia were cited to show how these countries responded to the inevitable sweep of democracy, which varied from democratization by revolutionary people’s power, to political liberalization led by elites as a top-down, slowly calibrated change. [xxii] However, just as the number of democracies in the Third Wave looked set to outpace the number of non-democracies, democratization for many of the liberalizing countries in the Third Wave stalled and even reverse; democracies saw erosions in government accountability gain pace even as autocracies seemed poised to remain in office. [xxiii] With recent democratic stalling, reversals, and backsliding, the examination has shifted from ‘why’ democratization occurs to ‘what’ constitutes democracy. [xxiv]

Given recent democratic reversals, it is useful to ask: how popular is democracy? The good news is that democracy is highly valued across democratic and less-democratic countries. Witness, for instance, responses to the question ‘How important is it for you to live in a country that is governed democratically?’, captured in the most recent public opinion survey by the World Values Survey (WVS). Of 125,000 participants from a total of 79 democratic and less-democratic countries in the wave 7 survey conducted between 2017 and 2020, a clear majority of 51% responded it is ‘absolutely important’, that is 10 on the 10-point scale, while a supermajority of over 75% of respondents ranked it from 8 to 10. [xxv] Democracy is also found to be highly sought after among respondents in East and Southeast Asia; this is despite popular perceptions that citizens in these countries are willing to trade democratic progress for economic development per the East Asian development model. [xxvi] Thus, the WVS wave 7 survey reports that over 39% of 18,000 respondents from 11 countries or special autonomous regions in East and Southeast Asia said it is ‘absolutely important’, that is 10 on the 10-point scale, to live in a country that is governed democratically, while 72% of respondents ranked it at the top end of the scale from 8 to 10. [xxvii]

This wide and popular embrace of democracy contrasts with the recent spate of democratic decline, as described in the introduction, and is all the more reason to examine democratic quality and depth. In this section, we discuss recent democracy studies to situate the relevance of local-level politics to democratic depth and quality.

Earlier studies of ‘what’ constitutes democracy focused on formal elements and institutions of democracy, including the rule of law, participation, competitive elections, executive and legislative institutions, and public sector reforms. [xxviii] Studies found these formal or institutional elements of democracy may be manipulated to maintain autocrats’ tenure in office. [xxix] Illiberal democracies, hybrid regimes then, may be the result of deliberate and purposeful design rather than opportunistic responses. Indeed, Gandhi [xxx] notes that institutional reforms carried out under the guise of populist rhetoric of ‘diminish[ing] the power of elites’ are among one of the easiest ways to target and incapacitate the opposition.

These findings have catalyzed the next generation of studies on democracy into examining ‘political factors that have received little attention’ for defending democracy, that is factors beyond the evaluation of formal institutional or operational elements in assessments of democratic quality and depth. [xxxi] Civil society, or citizen support for democracy, is one such factor. [xxxii] At its most elementary, democratic quality and depth rely on the depth and breadth of citizens’ support for democracy, which may be captured through their ‘commitment to democratic values and principles’, beyond their stated support for or satisfaction with democracy. [xxxiii] Thus, studies have examined democratic attitudes and support in East and Southeast Asia since the onset of the Third Wave. [xxxiv] Indeed, Nobel peace prize winner and former president of Korea, Kim Dae Jung, has taken on the discussion of citizens’ democratic values, motivated by apparent contradictions between Confucian values of respect for and obedience to authority and democratic challenges. [xxxv] Collective action by civil society counteracts democratic stalling or decline [xxxvi] As Haggard and Kaufman [xxxvii] note, their study found mass mobilizations of civil society not only led to half of all democratic transitions between 1980 and 2008 but also had enduring effects on democratic quality and depth. This is echoed in Kadivar et al. [xxxviii], which found that the length of social movements before the democratic transition significantly explained democratic depth and quality, due in part to capacity-building that maintained civil society as a key actor to demand democratic deepening.

We contend that subnational politics is another such political factor, in ways highly congruent with the contributions of civil society. In particular, local offices are often springboards to higher offices, whether at the local or national levels. [xxxix] Thus, similar to civil society and its mobilization, local politics are capacity-building and experiential training grounds for elected or appointed officials; further, these officials remain key political actors for the future. In the next section, we summarize the articles in this special issue that investigate if and how local-level politics operationalizes as capacity-building and experiential training grounds.

How Local Politics Matters to Democratic Quality and Depth: Overview of the Article

With democracy so widely and highly prized, and extensively researched, it may be surprising to learn that there are a remarkably small number of studies on subnational or local democracy: a Google Scholar search yields a mere 64,000 results, or less than 2% of the 3.6 million total studies on democracy to date. The neglect overlooks the fact that local politics matter to democratic quality and depth in at least four ways. Briefly, to recap, they are: first, the existence of SURs that coexist with democracy at the national level [xl]; second, political decentralization in the region that places local politics front and center of government responsibility and responsiveness considerations; third, vertical and horizontal accountability through local governments and politics; and fourth, interrogation of the exceptionalism of the East Asian development model that is emulated globally with democratic quality and depth. Here, we summarise the findings in the articles on this special issue to show how local politics operationalize as capacity-building and experiential training grounds where elected or appointed officials remain as current and future key players in politics in Korea.

Lee et al. [xli] assess political decentralization and accountability in local-level politics: the authors weigh legislative productivity and performance of the Busan Metropolitan Council from 2006 to 2018 (the 5th to 7th Councils), with particular attention to the legislation of laws and ordinances. Legislative performance is much studied at the national level, often because of an examination of horizontal accountability—where legislatures provide checks and balances against executive authority—and vertical accountability, where legislators are elected representatives for their constituencies. The performance of local-level legislatures is generally overlooked, notwithstanding the same import of accountability and responsiveness at subnational levels as national ones. Working through ordinances proposed by the Busan Metropolitan Council, the authors apply negative binomial regressions to measure the effects of individual attributes on legislative performance and network analyses to explore the effects of legislative networks on the institutionalization of local councils and reach three important findings. First, local-level legislators as council members proposed more ordinances over time, and this increase displaced the number of ordinances made by the local-level executive, the mayor, suggesting an erosion of executive dominance of policymaking in local councils. Second, recently elected council members are more active with ordinance proposals, which suggests an effort to show representation and connectivity to voters. Third, spatial network analyses show that ordinance proposal network communities have become more diverse and multi-centered over time, suggesting a move from personalistic politics to institutionalized politics. These results show, individually and together, that local politics are capacity-building and experiential training grounds for elected or appointed officials.

The significance of this capacity-building and experiential training cannot be overstated, as the articles by Shin and Jhee [xlii] and Lee and Suh [xliii] show. Shin and Jhee [xliv] evaluate the effects of decentralization on citizens’ satisfaction with public service delivery. Using confirmatory factor analyses and structural equation modeling on data from 17 provincial-level governments, the authors assess the extent to which fiscal and administrative decentralization in Korea have improved both local-government capacity and citizens’ satisfaction with public service delivery at the local level. On the one hand, they find that both fiscal and administrative decentralization improve local government capacity, lending weight to the relevance of local politics in capacity-building and experiential training. The authors also find that citizens’ satisfaction with public services is lower despite improved government capacity at the local level. They conclude that this may spring from citizens’ perceptions of low levels of accountability at the local level, a finding that supports the positive impact of political decentralization, and not merely fiscal and administrative decentralization, improving government responsibility and responsiveness.

Lee and Suh [xlv] link accountability at the local level with citizens’ trust and support, to affirm that local-level politics are important barometers for evaluating democratic quality and depth. Specifically, using data from the first and fourth waves of the Asian Barometer Survey, the authors apply seemingly unrelated regressions to assess whether citizens’ trust in local government reflects their trust at the national level, or whether the constituents of political trust at the two levels are dissimilar. The question takes off from studies that show political trust buffers democratizing systems, but not governments from public pressures for performance. [xlvi] If political trust at the local level is influenced by different components from those at the national level, then (a) political trust at the local level potentially buffers democratizing systems from the pressures of performance; and (b) local-level politics, therefore, offer experiential training and capacity-building grounds for building citizens’ support and trust in democracy. The results show that the bases of local trust are differentiated from national trust to affirm both conclusions—that is, local-level politics provide distinctive measures of democratic quality and depth; and further, local-level politics may serve as the capacity-building of political trust.

To summarise, the articles in this special issue show if and how local-level politics are distinct from national-level democracy to warrant separate treatment and use in calibrating democratic quality and depth. Relatedly, they also show how local politics operationalize as capacity-building and experiential training grounds to ensure their relevance for democratic deepening. The findings strongly support the examination of local politics in assessments of democratic quality and depth.

CONCLUSION

With the vast literature on democracy, it bears reminding that democracy studies are empirically driven, fuelled by the ebbs and flows of the waves of democracy on the ground. While earlier studies focused on institutional and structural foundations of democracy, which leading democracy scholars Diamond and Morlino [xlvii] refer to as ‘why’ democratization occurs, recent democratic stalling, backsliding, reversals, and deconsolidation have led to calls for a more robust and systematic evaluation of democratic variability, democratic consolidation, or the demise of democracy, effectively shifting research gears to ‘what’ constitutes democracy. [xlviii]

In this special issue, we answer the call and bring attention to local-level politics to explore democratic quality and depth. Knowledge accumulation has led to an admonishment by prominent scholars Haggard and Kaufman [xlix] to investigate ‘political factors that have received little attention in defending democracy. Civil society has emerged as one of these political factors; we contend that local politics is one factor that has been mostly overlooked.

In this introduction to the special issue, we offer four reasons to study local politics as relevant to democratic variability or consolidation. Through their examination of local-level politics in Korea, the authors in this special issue provide evidence that subnational politics may be distinct from national-level institutions and democratic progress; indeed, citizens’ responses to subnational- and national-level politics are also different. The articles also affirm local politics are capacity-building and experiential training grounds to further vertical and horizontal accountability, including through strengthening legislative checks of executive performance or building citizens’ political trust and satisfaction in local government.

The study of local politics provides theory-building and empirical evidence to plumb democratic depth and quality. The introduction and articles in this special issue invite further examination of local politics and their resonance with national-level democracy. We look forward to more studies that search out the effects of little-researched political factors on robust democratic depth and quality.

.


[i] Huntington, S. P. (1991). Democracy’s third wave. Journal of Democracy2(2), 12– 34. https://doi.org/10.1353/jod.1991.0016
Lipset, S. M. (1959). Some social requisites of democracy: Economic development and political legitimacy. American Political Science Review53(1), 69– 105. https://doi.org/10.2307/1951731
Moore, B. (1966). Social origins of dictatorship and democracy: Lord and peasant in the making of the modern world. Beacon Press.
Huntington’s (1991) waves of democratic transitions provide a useful heuristic to curate the immense literature. The scholar saw the First Wave of democracy as occurring between the 1820s and 1926, with the Second Wave starting at the end of World War II and peaking in 1962, and the Third Wave as between 1974 and 1990.

[ii] Huntington, S. P. (1991). Democracy’s third wave. Journal of Democracy, 2(2), 12– 34. https://doi.org/10.1353/jod.1991.0016
O’Donnell, G. A., Schmitter, P. C., & Whitehead, L. (1986). Transitions from authoritarian rule: Tentative conclusions about uncertain democracies. Johns Hopkins University Press.
Przeworski, A. (1991). Democracy and the market: Political and economic reforms in Eastern Europe and Latin America. Cambridge University Press.
Remmer, K. L. (1991). The political impact of the economic crisis in Latin America in the 1980s. American Political Science Review, 85(3), 777– 800. https://doi.org/10.2307/1963850

[iii] Bratton, M., & Mattes, R. (2001). Support for democracy in Africa: Intrinsic or instrumental? British Journal of Political Science31(3), 447– 474. https://doi.org/10.1017/S0007123401000175
Brinks, D., & Coppedge, M. (2006). Diffusion is no illusion: Neighbor emulation in the third wave of democracy. Comparative Political Studies, 39(4), 463– 489. https://doi.org/10.1177/0010414005276666
Helliwell, J. F. (1994). Empirical linkages between democracy and economic growth. British Journal of Political Science24(2), 225– 248. https://doi.org/10.1017/S0007123400009790
Pevehouse, J. C. (2002). Democracy from the outside-in? International organizations and democratization. International Organization, 56(3), 515– 549. https://doi.org/10.1162/002081802760199872

[iv] Fishman, R. M. (2016). Rethinking dimensions of democracy for empirical analysis: Authenticity, quality, depth, and consolidation. Annual Review of Political Science19(1), 289– 309. https://doi.org/10.1146/annurev-polisci-042114-015910
While studies generally focus on democratic quality and depth to encompass consolidation, Fishman (2016) discusses four dimensions of democracy—authenticity, quality, depth, and consolidation—for use in theory-building and empirical assessments.

[v] Haggard, S., & Kaufman, R. R. (2016). Democratization during the third wave. Annual Review of Political Science19(1), 125– 144. https://doi.org/10.1146/annurev-polisci-042114-015137
Diamond, L. J., & Morlino, L. (2004). The quality of democracy: An overview. Journal of Democracy15(4), 20– 31. https://doi.org/10.1353/jod.2004.0060
Foa, R. S., & Mounk, Y. (2017). The signs of deconsolidation. Journal of Democracy28(1), 5– 15. https://doi.org/10.1353/jod.2017.0000
Fuchs, D., & Roller, E. (2018). Conceptualizing and measuring the quality of democracy: The citizens’ perspective. Politics and Governance6(1), 22– 32. https://doi.org/10.17645/pag.v6i1.1188
Kadivar, M. A., Usmani, A., & Bradlow, B. H. (2020). The long march: Deep democracy in cross-national perspective. Social Forces98(3), 1311– 1338. https://doi.org/10.1093/sf/soz050
Yap, O. F. (2006). Agenda control, intraparty conflict, and government spending in Asia: Evidence from South Korea and Taiwan. Journal of East Asian Studies6(1), 69– 104. https://doi.org/10.1017/S1598240800000047

[vi] The terms ‘subnational’ and ‘local’ are used interchangeably in this special issue.

[vii] Gibson, E. L. (2012). Boundary control: Subnational authoritarianism in federal democracies. Cambridge University Press.
Giraudy, A. (2015). Democrats and autocrats: Pathways of subnational undemocratic regime continuity within democratic countries. Oxford University Press.

[viii] Cha, J., & Yap, O. F. (2020). Challenging the East Asian development model: Evidence from South Korea. The European Journal of Development Research32(1), 220– 250. https://doi.org/10.1057/s41287-019-00227-1

[ix] Diaz-Serrano, L., & Rodríguez-Pose, A. (2015). Decentralization and the welfare state: What do citizens perceive? Social Indicators Research120(2), 411– 435. https://doi.org/10.1007/s11205-014-0599-5
Gélineau, F., & Remmer, K. L. (2006). Political decentralization and electoral accountability: The Argentine experience, 1983–2001. British Journal of Political Science36(1), 133– 157. https://doi.org/10.1017/S000712340600007X

[x] The list of 17 countries in East and Southeast Asia are: China, Mongolia, Japan, Taiwan, South Korea, North Korea, Indonesia, Vietnam, Thailand, Singapore, the Philippines, Malaysia, Myanmar, Laos, Cambodia, Brunei and Timor-Leste. See Nations Online at https://www.nationsonline.org/oneworld/about.html.

[xi] Diamond, L. J., & Morlino, L. (2004). The quality of democracy: An overview. Journal of Democracy15(4), 20– 31. https://doi.org/10.1353/jod.2004.0060

[xii] Id.
Yap, O. F. (2006). Agenda control, intraparty conflict, and government spending in Asia: Evidence from South Korea and Taiwan. Journal of East Asian Studies6(1), 69– 104. https://doi.org/10.1017/S1598240800000047

[xiii] Kim, D. J. (1994). Is culture destiny? The myth of Asia’s anti-democratic values. Foreign Affairs73(6), 189– 194. https://doi.org/10.2307/20047005

[xiv] Cha, J., & Yap, O. F. (2020). Challenging the East Asian development model: Evidence from South Korea. The European Journal of Development Research32(1), 220– 250. https://doi.org/10.1057/s41287-019-00227-1

[xv] Id.

[xvi] Haggard, S., & Kaufman, R. R. (2016). Democratization during the third wave. Annual Review of Political Science19(1), 125– 144. https://doi.org/10.1146/annurev-polisci-042114-015137
Huntington, S. P. (1991). Democracy’s third wave. Journal of Democracy, 2(2), 12– 34. https://doi.org/10.1353/jod.1991.0016
Yap, O. F. (2005). Bargaining in less-democratic newly industrialized countries: Model and evidence from South Korea, Taiwan, Singapore, and Malaysia. Journal of Theoretical Politics17(3), 283– 309. https://doi.org/10.1177/0951629805052880

[xvii] Lee, B.-J., Kim, T. W., Suh, J., & Yap, O. F. (2021). Local government performance and democratic consolidation: Explaining ordinance proposal in Busan Metropolitan Council. Asia & the Pacific Policy Studies8(1), 15– 41. https://doi.org/10.1002/app5.319.
Shin, G., & Jhee, B. K. (2021). Better service delivery, more satisfied citizens? The mediating effects of local government management capacity in South Korea. Asia & the Pacific Policy Studies8(1), 42– 67. https://doi.org/10.1002/app5.316

[xviii] Fuchs, D., & Roller, E. (2018). Conceptualizing and measuring the quality of democracy: The citizens’ perspective. Politics and Governance6(1), 22– 32. https://doi.org/10.17645/pag.v6i1.1188
Haggard, S., & Kaufman, R. R. (2016). Democratization during the third wave. Annual Review of Political Science19(1), 125– 144. https://doi.org/10.1146/annurev-polisci-042114-015137
Kadivar, M. A., Usmani, A., & Bradlow, B. H. (2020). The long march: Deep democracy in cross-national perspective. Social Forces98(3), 1311– 1338. https://doi.org/10.1093/sf/soz050

[xix] Huntington, S. P. (1991). Democracy’s third wave. Journal of Democracy, 2(2), 12– 34. https://doi.org/10.1353/jod.1991.0016

[xx] Lipset, S. M. (1959). Some social requisites of democracy: Economic development and political legitimacy. American Political Science Review53(1), 69– 105. https://doi.org/10.2307/1951731

[xxi] Moore, B. (1966). Social origins of dictatorship and democracy: Lord and peasant in the making of the modern world. Beacon Press.

[xxii] Jones, D. M. (1998). Democratization, civil society, and illiberal middle-class culture in Pacific Asia. Comparative Politics30(2), 147– 169. https://doi.org/10.2307/422285
O’Donnell, G. A., Schmitter, P. C., & Whitehead, L. (1986). Transitions from authoritarian rule: Tentative conclusions about uncertain democracies. Johns Hopkins University Press.
Przeworski, A. (1991). Democracy and the market: Political and economic reforms in Eastern Europe and Latin America. Cambridge University Press.
Remmer, K. L. (1991). The political impact of the economic crisis in Latin America in the 1980s. American Political Science Review, 85(3), 777– 800. https://doi.org/10.2307/1963850

[xxiii] Gandhi, J. (2019). The institutional roots of democratic backsliding. The Journal of Politics81(1), e11– e16. https://doi.org/10.1086/700653
Haggard, S., & Kaufman, R. R. (2016). Democratization during the third wave. Annual Review of Political Science19(1), 125– 144. https://doi.org/10.1146/annurev-polisci-042114-015137

[xxiv] Diamond, L. J., & Morlino, L. (2004). The quality of democracy: An overview. Journal of Democracy15(4), 20– 31. https://doi.org/10.1353/jod.2004.0060
Fuchs, D., & Roller, E. (2018). Conceptualizing and measuring the quality of democracy: The citizens’ perspective. Politics and Governance6(1), 22– 32. https://doi.org/10.17645/pag.v6i1.1188
Gandhi, J. (2019). The institutional roots of democratic backsliding. The Journal of Politics81(1), e11– e16. https://doi.org/10.1086/700653
Haggard, S., & Kaufman, R. R. (2016). Democratization during the third wave. Annual Review of Political Science19(1), 125– 144. https://doi.org/10.1146/annurev-polisci-042114-015137
Kadivar, M. A., Usmani, A., & Bradlow, B. H. (2020). The long march: Deep democracy in cross-national perspective. Social Forces98(3), 1311– 1338. https://doi.org/10.1093/sf/soz050
Yap, O. F. (2006). Agenda control, intraparty conflict, and government spending in Asia: Evidence from South Korea and Taiwan. Journal of East Asian Studies6(1), 69– 104. https://doi.org/10.1017/S1598240800000047

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