Institutional Characteristics and Regime Survival: Why Are Semi-Democracies Less Durable Than Autocracies and Democracies?

Previous studies report that semi-democratic regimes are less durable than both democracies and autocracies. Still, mixing democratic and autocratic characteristics need not destabilize regimes, as three highly plausible alternative explanations of this correlation remain unaccounted for: (a) semi-d...

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Published in:American journal of political science Vol. 59; no. 3; pp. 656 - 670
Main Authors: Knutsen, Carl Henrik, Nygård, Håvard Mokleiv
Format: Journal Article
Language:English
Published: Oxford Blackwell Publishing Ltd 01-07-2015
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Summary:Previous studies report that semi-democratic regimes are less durable than both democracies and autocracies. Still, mixing democratic and autocratic characteristics need not destabilize regimes, as three highly plausible alternative explanations of this correlation remain unaccounted for: (a) semi-democracies emerge under conditions of political instability and social turmoil; (b) other regime characteristics explain duration; and (c) extant democracy measures do not register all regime changes. We elaborate on and test for these explanations, but find strikingly robust evidence that semi-democracies are inherently less durable than both democracies and autocracies. "Semi-democracies are particularly unstable political regimes" should thus be considered a rare stylized fact of comparative politics. The analysis yields several other interesting results. For instance, autocracies and semi-democracies are equally likely to experience "liberalizing" regime changes more specifically, and once accounting for differences in degree of democracy, there is no robust evidence of differences in duration between military and single-party regimes.
Bibliography:istex:12EA2977449F3FC881A1F0821018AAB44EC4C143
ark:/67375/WNG-3FL9RNPQ-H
ArticleID:AJPS12168
We thank Scott Gates, Håvard Hegre, Bjørn Høyland, Bethany Lacina, Håvard Strand, Tore Wig, anonymous reviewers, the current and former editors of
AJPS
http://dx.doi.org/10.7910/DVN/27371
.
as well as participants at the 2013 ISA Annual Convention in San Francisco, the 2013 Annual MPSA Conference in Chicago, and the 2013 APSA Annual Meeting in Chicago for valuable comments and suggestions. We also thank Jason Brownlee for making his data available. This research was partially funded by Norwegian Research Council grant 204454‐V10. Replication data and code are available from the AJPS Data Archive on Dataverse
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ISSN:0092-5853
1540-5907
DOI:10.1111/ajps.12168