代议制民主的本土根源

AARN: Race Pub Date : 2014-12-01 DOI:10.2139/ssrn.2553916
Jeanet Sinding Bentzen, J. Hariri, James A. Robinson
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引用次数: 8

摘要

我们证明,在现代国家之前的民族社会中,领导层继承的规则可以预测当代的政治制度;土著社会的领导人选举与当代代议制民主有关。然而,基本的联系取决于一个国家内土著群体的相对力量;实力较强的群体似乎能够塑造国家政权的轨迹,而实力较弱的群体则不能。这一发现扩展并限定了大量定性文献,这些文献在中世纪欧洲的地方民主机构中发现了对代议制民主发展的积极推动。它表明,当代政权不仅受到殖民历史和欧洲影响的影响;土著历史也很重要。对于实践者,我们的研究结果表明,外部改革者的政权建设能力不应被夸大。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
The Indigenous Roots of Representative Democracy
We document that rules for leadership succession in ethnic societies that antedate the modern state predict contemporary political regimes; leadership selection by election in indigenous societies is associated with contemporary representative democracy. The basic association, however, is conditioned on the relative strength of the indigenous groups within a country; stronger groups seem to have been able to shape national regime trajectories, weaker groups do not. This finding extends and qualifies a substantive qualitative literature, which has found in local democratic institutions of medieval Europe a positive impulse towards the development of representative democracy. It shows that contemporary regimes are shaped not only by colonial history and European influence; indigenous history also matters. For practitioners, our findings suggest that external reformers' capacity for regime-building should not be exaggerated.
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