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1 - Research methods and democratization

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  05 July 2012

Michael Coppedge
Affiliation:
University of Notre Dame, Indiana
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Summary

Why are some countries democracies while others are not? Why do some democracies survive while others fail? These are core questions in political science, sociology, history, and economics. Scholars have been trying to answer them ever since Aristotle. After 2,500 years of research, what do we know? How do we know it? This book answers the latter two questions.

Rationale

After so much has been written on these matters, I am obliged to explain why we need this particular book on democracy. The answer is simple: to distill this vast literature down to a comprehensible critical survey! Democratization has been studied for so long and in so many different ways that the literature is overwhelming and bewildering. It encompasses ideas borrowed from the study of early modern Europe, strategic bargaining games, Asian cultures, measurement theory, public opinion about economic trends, legacies of colonialism, geographic networks, theories of class struggle, demographic trends, war and peace, and many other phenomena. There are dozens of hypotheses about the causes of democracy (Chapter 4 summarizes fifty-five of them). The first step toward digesting this mountain of scholarship is taking a comprehensive inventory of all the possible explanations.

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Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Print publication year: 2012

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