Declining systemic trust in the political elite in the EU’s new member states: the divergence between east-central Europe and the baltic states

A. Ágh
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引用次数: 4

Abstract

Abstract In the last decade there has been a process of rolling-back Europeanization efforts in the EU’s new member states (NMS), a process intensified by the global crisis. This de-Europeanization and dedemocratization process in the NMS has become a significant part of a more general polycrisis in the EU. The backslide of democracy in the NMS as a topical issue has usually been analysed in terms of macro-politics, formal-legal state institutions, party systems, and macroeconomics. The most significant decline of democratization, however, is evident in the public’s decreasing participation in politics and in the eroding trust. This decline in systemic trust in political elites in the NMS has been largely neglected by analysts. Therefore, this paper concentrates on this relatively overlooked dimension of declining trust and social capital in the NMS. This analysis employs the concepts of governance, trust, and social capital to balance the usual formalistic top-down approach with a bottom-up approach that better illustrates the divergence between East-Central Europe and the Baltic states’ sub-regional development.
欧盟新成员国对政治精英的系统性信任不断下降:中东欧与波罗的海国家之间的分歧
在过去的十年中,欧盟新成员国(NMS)的欧洲化努力出现了倒退,这一进程因全球危机而加剧。NMS的这种去欧洲化和去民主化进程已经成为欧盟更普遍的多重危机的重要组成部分。作为一个热门话题,NMS中的民主倒退通常从宏观政治、正式法律国家机构、政党制度和宏观经济学的角度来分析。然而,民主化最显著的下降表现在公众参与政治的减少和信任的侵蚀上。分析人士在很大程度上忽视了国家管理系统对政治精英的系统性信任的下降。因此,本文主要研究NMS中信任下降和社会资本这一相对被忽视的维度。该分析采用了治理、信任和社会资本的概念,以平衡通常的形式主义自上而下的方法与自下而上的方法,后者更好地说明了中东欧和波罗的海国家次区域发展之间的差异。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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