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Varieties of Indoctrination: The Politicization of Education and the Media around the World

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  20 March 2024

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Abstract

For many decades, scholars assumed voluntary compliance and citizens’ commitment to a regime’s principles and values to be critical for regime stability. A growing literature argues that indoctrination is essential to achieve this congruence. However, the absence of a clear definition and comprehensive comparative measures of indoctrination have hindered systematic research on such issues. In this paper, we fill this gap by synthesizing literature across disciplines to clarify the concept of indoctrination, focusing particularly on the politicization of education and the media. We then outline how the abstract concept can be operationalized, and introduce and validate an original expert-coded dataset on indoctrination that covers 160 countries from 1945 to the present. The dataset should facilitate a new generation of empirical inquiry on the causes and consequences of indoctrination.

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Type
Special Section: Political Communication
Creative Commons
Creative Common License - CCCreative Common License - BY
This is an Open Access article, distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution licence (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0), which permits unrestricted re-use, distribution and reproduction, provided the original article is properly cited.
Copyright
© The Author(s), 2024. Published by Cambridge University Press on behalf of American Political Science Association
Figure 0

Figure 1 The Phases of the Indoctrination Process

Figure 1

Figure 2 Mapping Our Concepts: Indoctrination in EducationNote: The rounded boxes indicate V-Indoc indices, and plain boxes indicate measured variables (V-Indoc indicators). See figure E-7 in appendix E for more details (i.e., with labels for the V-Indoc indices and indicators added).

Figure 2

Figure 3 Mapping Our Concepts: Indoctrination in the MediaNote: The rounded boxes indicate V-Indoc indices and the plain boxes indicate variables (V-Indoc indicators). We do not have indices of the media content (the boxes are grayed out). The democratic and patriotic content are measured as separate indicators. The index of indoctrination potential in the media is equivalent to the index of coherence (the box with potential is grayed out). For the index of indoctrination coherence, we combine the existing V-Dem indicators (highlighted in italics) with the novel V-Indoc indicators. See figure E-8 in appendix E for more details (i.e., with labels for the V-Indoc indices and indicators added).

Figure 3

Figure 4 Number of Unique Coders by CountryNote: The number of coders may vary across indicators within a country as some experts may not have had the expertise to code all indicators for all years.

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Figure 5 Percentage and Number of Countries Covered in the V-Indoc DatasetNote: The percentage of countries relative to the total number of countries in the V-Dem dataset (Coppedge et al. 2022) (left axis; solid lines) and the number of countries (right axis; dotted lines) are based on two indicators in the V-Indoc dataset: (1) education (the centralization of the school curriculum) and (2) media (state-owned print media).

Figure 5

Figure 6 Indoctrination Potential in Education (2021)

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Figure 7 Indoctrination Potential in Education (2021): Bottom/Top CasesNote: The figure plots point estimates along with the lower/upper bounds of the 68% credible intervals. It shows the five highest/lowest scoring countries on the index that are coded by at least three experts on average. The full list of countries can be seen in appendix H.

Figure 7

Figure 8 Indoctrination Content in Education (2021)

Figure 8

Figure 9 Indoctrination Content in Education (2021): Bottom/Top CasesNote: The figure plots point estimates along with the lower/upper bounds of the 68% credible intervals. It shows the five highest/lowest scoring countries on the index that are coded by at least three experts on average. The full list of countries can be seen in appendix H.

Figure 9

Figure 10 Democracy and the Indoctrination Indices in 2021Note: Lines and confidence intervals are produced by LOESS smoothing. Both (1) country-labeled plots for the first column and (2) correlations between these indices and other measures of democracy can be seen in appendix I.

Figure 10

Figure 11 Indoctrination Potential and Content in Education across RegimesNote: The figure plots point estimates along with the lower/upper bounds of the 68% credible intervals.

Figure 11

Figure 12 Indoctrination Potential and Content in Education (Russia)Note: The figure plots point estimates along with the lower/upper bounds of the 68% credible intervals. The indices vary between 0 (low values) and 1 (high values). The indicators reflect interval measures converted by the measurement model, and vary between roughly −3 (low values) and 3 (high values). Red vertical lines indicate education reforms from the WERD (Bromley et al. 2022). In the case of Russia, education reforms are coded in the WERD for the period between 1939 and 2011. The top panel plots aggregate indices of indoctrination potential and democratic/patriotic content. The bottom panel plots corresponding indicators for each of the aggregate indices: political teacher firing for the index of indoctrination potential; critical discussion inside the classroom for the index of democratic content; patriotism in the curriculum for the index of patriotic content.

Figure 12

Table 1 Highest and Lowest Correlations/Classifications

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Figure 13 Indoctrination Potential in Education across Autocratic Regime TypesNote: Military regimes are excluded as the reference category in the fixed-effects model. The figure plots coefficient estimates along with the lower/upper bounds of the 95% confidence intervals. The full results are reported in table M-5 in appendix M.

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