EXPLAINING DEMOCRATIC DECONSOLIDATION: EVIDENCE FROM ASIAN DEMOCRACIES

Are Asian democracies deconsolidating, in line with world-wide trends?   This article examines four consolidated democracies in Asia: Japan, South Korea, and Taiwan, plus Indonesia, whose own consolidation has been problematic. Using public opinion data, we evaluate two competing models—civic cultu...

Full description

Saved in:
Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Saiful Mujani, R. William Liddle
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Universitas Jenderal Achmad Yani 2021-06-01
Series:Journal of Global Strategic Studies
Subjects:
Online Access:https://ejournal.fisip.unjani.ac.id/index.php/JGSS/article/view/570
Tags: Add Tag
No Tags, Be the first to tag this record!
_version_ 1849390134651256832
author Saiful Mujani
R. William Liddle
author_facet Saiful Mujani
R. William Liddle
author_sort Saiful Mujani
collection DOAJ
description Are Asian democracies deconsolidating, in line with world-wide trends?   This article examines four consolidated democracies in Asia: Japan, South Korea, and Taiwan, plus Indonesia, whose own consolidation has been problematic. Using public opinion data, we evaluate two competing models—civic culture and political economy—to test whether there is a decline in democratic support. We report that the political economy model is more persuasive. Declines in democratic support are associated more consistently with democratic performance and education.  Because education levels are tending to rise, and political socialization continues into adulthood, we conclude that there should be little fear that Asian democracies will deconsolidate.
format Article
id doaj-art-eb6dfb03dd2543f5b9560e99c584952f
institution Kabale University
issn 2798-4427
language English
publishDate 2021-06-01
publisher Universitas Jenderal Achmad Yani
record_format Article
series Journal of Global Strategic Studies
spelling doaj-art-eb6dfb03dd2543f5b9560e99c584952f2025-08-20T03:41:46ZengUniversitas Jenderal Achmad YaniJournal of Global Strategic Studies2798-44272021-06-011110.36859/jgss.v1i1.570EXPLAINING DEMOCRATIC DECONSOLIDATION: EVIDENCE FROM ASIAN DEMOCRACIESSaiful Mujani0R. William Liddle1Universitas Islam Negeri Syarif Hidayatullah, IndonesiaThe Ohio State University, USA Are Asian democracies deconsolidating, in line with world-wide trends?   This article examines four consolidated democracies in Asia: Japan, South Korea, and Taiwan, plus Indonesia, whose own consolidation has been problematic. Using public opinion data, we evaluate two competing models—civic culture and political economy—to test whether there is a decline in democratic support. We report that the political economy model is more persuasive. Declines in democratic support are associated more consistently with democratic performance and education.  Because education levels are tending to rise, and political socialization continues into adulthood, we conclude that there should be little fear that Asian democracies will deconsolidate. https://ejournal.fisip.unjani.ac.id/index.php/JGSS/article/view/570Democratic deconsolidation, civic culture, political economy, Asia
spellingShingle Saiful Mujani
R. William Liddle
EXPLAINING DEMOCRATIC DECONSOLIDATION: EVIDENCE FROM ASIAN DEMOCRACIES
Journal of Global Strategic Studies
Democratic deconsolidation, civic culture, political economy, Asia
title EXPLAINING DEMOCRATIC DECONSOLIDATION: EVIDENCE FROM ASIAN DEMOCRACIES
title_full EXPLAINING DEMOCRATIC DECONSOLIDATION: EVIDENCE FROM ASIAN DEMOCRACIES
title_fullStr EXPLAINING DEMOCRATIC DECONSOLIDATION: EVIDENCE FROM ASIAN DEMOCRACIES
title_full_unstemmed EXPLAINING DEMOCRATIC DECONSOLIDATION: EVIDENCE FROM ASIAN DEMOCRACIES
title_short EXPLAINING DEMOCRATIC DECONSOLIDATION: EVIDENCE FROM ASIAN DEMOCRACIES
title_sort explaining democratic deconsolidation evidence from asian democracies
topic Democratic deconsolidation, civic culture, political economy, Asia
url https://ejournal.fisip.unjani.ac.id/index.php/JGSS/article/view/570
work_keys_str_mv AT saifulmujani explainingdemocraticdeconsolidationevidencefromasiandemocracies
AT rwilliamliddle explainingdemocraticdeconsolidationevidencefromasiandemocracies