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Democracy under stress focuses on the global financial crisis of
2008-2009 and its implications for democracy. Why and how did the
crisis come about? Are there any instructive lessons to be drawn
from comparisons with the Great Depression of the 1930s? What are
the democratic response mechanisms to cope with serious crises? Do
they work? Is China a new trend setter? Do values matter? Are
global democratic rules a possibility? These are some of the key
questions addressed in the volume.
This book compares five newly emerged democracies in Europe, South
East Asia, Latin America, and Africa. Cutting across vastly
different historical and cultural backgrounds, this book tells the
story of how societies come to terms with a painful past and how
politics, culture, and the economy intertwine in the process of
creating new democratic nations. The volume pioneers a new approach
to the study of democratization. It does so by combining
comparative and interdisciplinary analysis of South Africa, Poland,
(East) Germany, South Korea, and Chilethat is, five countries where
a similar general thrust of democratization is set against the most
diversified cultural and historical backgrounds.
Values - elites and ordinary people This book reveals the diverse
worlds of history, civic culture and values of South Africa, South
Korea, Chile, Poland, Turkey, Germany and Sweden. It explores the
similarities and contrasts between the values of the elites and the
ordinary people. Written from various disciplinary perspectives and
offering both empirical evidence and insiders' knowledge, this book
is bound to interest a wide variety of readers. The study on which
the book reports was in the main based on analyses of value
orientations of the parliamentary and media elites and those of the
ordinary citizens. The data for the elites were obtained from
surveys conducted for the purposes of the study; the data for the
general population were drawn from the latest World Values Surveys.
The volume is divided into two parts. The first part, entitled
Theory and history, considers the quality of democracy in the
context of the historical and cultural heritage of the seven
countries, their civic culture and notions of citizenship, and
their constitutions as foundations of the democratic political
order. The second part of the book, entitled Theory and empiricism,
assesses the quality of democracy by means of comparative analyses
of the convergence and divergence in value orientations of the
elites and the masses, both within each case and across all the
seven cases.
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