Education, public support for institutions, and the separation of powers

IF 2.5 2区 社会学 Q1 POLITICAL SCIENCE
Sivaram Cheruvu
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引用次数: 2

Abstract

A successful democratic transition requires citizens to embrace a new set of political institutions. Citizens’ support is vital for these institutions to uphold the burgeoning constitutional and legal order. Courts, for example, often rely on citizens’ support and threat of electoral punishment against the government to enforce their rulings. In this article, I consider whether education under democracy can engender this support. Using regression discontinuity, difference-in-differences, and difference-in-difference-in-differences designs, I find an additional year of schooling after the fall of the Berlin Wall has similar positive downstream effects on East Germans’ support across institutions. Since schooling similarly affects public support for judicial, legislative, and executive institutions, citizens are not necessarily inclined to electorally punish the other branches when they ignore a court's ruling. This potential inability of courts to constrain unlawful government behavior threatens the foundation of the separation of powers and the survival of democracy.
教育,公众对机构的支持,以及三权分立
成功的民主转型需要公民接受一套新的政治制度。公民的支持对这些机构维护蓬勃发展的宪法和法律秩序至关重要。例如,法院常常依靠公民的支持和对政府进行选举惩罚的威胁来执行裁决。在这篇文章中,我考虑民主下的教育是否能产生这种支持。使用回归不连续、差异中的差异和差异中的差异设计,我发现在柏林墙倒塌后多上一年的学校教育对东德人跨机构的支持有类似的积极下游影响。由于学校教育同样会影响公众对司法、立法和行政机构的支持,当其他部门无视法院的裁决时,公民不一定倾向于通过选举来惩罚它们。法院可能无法约束政府的非法行为,这威胁到三权分立的基础和民主的生存。
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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来源期刊
CiteScore
8.10
自引率
0.00%
发文量
54
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