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Democracy and the Culture of Skepticism - Political Trust in Argentina and Mexico (Paperback)
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Democracy and the Culture of Skepticism - Political Trust in Argentina and Mexico (Paperback)
Series: Russell Sage Foundation Series on Trust
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Some theorists claim that democracy cannot work without trust.
According to this argument, democracy fails unless citizens trust
that their governing institutions are serving their best interests.
Similarly, some assert that democracy works best when people trust
one another and have confidence that politicians will look after
citizen interests. Questioning such claims, Democracy and the
Culture of Skepticism, by Matthew Cleary and Susan Stokes, suggests
that skepticism, not trust, is the hallmark of political culture in
well-functioning democracies. Drawing on extensive research in two
developing democracies, Argentina and Mexico, Democracy and the
Culture of Skepticism shows that in regions of each country with
healthy democracies, people do not trust one another more than
those living in regions where democracy functions less well, nor do
they display more personal trust in governments or politicians.
Instead, the defining features of the healthiest democracies are
skepticism of government and a belief that politicians act in their
constituents' best interest only when it is personally advantageous
for them to do so. In contrast to scholars who lament what they see
as a breakdown in civic life, Cleary and Stokes find that people
residing in healthy democracies do not participate more in civic
organizations than others, but in fact, tend to retreat from civic
life in favor of private pursuits. The authors conclude that
governments are most efficient and responsive when they know that
institutions such as the press or an independent judiciary will
hold them accountable for their actions. The question of how much
citizens should trust politicians and governments has consumed
political theorists since America's founding. In Democracy and the
Culture of Skepticism, Matthew Cleary and Susan Stokes test the
relationship between trust and the quality of governance, showing
that it is not trust, but vigilance and skepticism that provide the
foundation for well-functioning democracies.
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