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In the Mood for Democracy? Democratic Support as Thermostatic Opinion-CORRIGENDUM

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  01 August 2023

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Abstract

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Type
Corrigendum
Copyright
© The Author(s), 2023. Published by Cambridge University Press on behalf of the American Political Science Association
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Table 1. Testing the Effects of Democracy on Change in Mood

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Table 2. Testing the Effects of Electoral and Minoritarian Democracy on Change in Mood

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Figure 1. The Dynamics of Democracy and Mood: Established DemocraciesEach plot shows V-Dem Liberal democracy (plotted using a black line) from 1988 to 2017 and estimates of democratic mood (plotted using a blue line). The shaded regions around the mood estimates indicate 90% uncertainty intervals. Vertical bars on the mood estimates indicate years in which survey data were available. Liberal democracy and mood are unit-normal standardized.

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Figure 2. The Dynamics of Democracy and Mood: New Democracies

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Figure 3. The Dynamics of Democracy and Mood: Autocracies

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Figure 4. The Dynamics of Democracy and Mood: Transitioning Regimes

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Figure 5. Simulated Effects of Change in Democracy on MoodSimulated effects are estimated using coefficients from models 1.1 (without corruption; left) and 1.2 (with corruption; right). The solid lines indicate the mean simulated effect; the shaded regions indicate the 95% confidence intervals of these effects.

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Figure 6. Simulated Effects of Changes in Electoral and Minoritarian Democracy on MoodSimulated effects, estimated using coefficients from model 2.1 (without corruption; left) and model 2.2 (with corruption; right). Effects of a change in electoral democracy are shown in top row; effects of change in minoritarian democracy in the bottom row. The solid lines indicate the mean predicted effect; the shaded regions indicate the 95% confidence intervals of these predicted effects.

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