时间越长越糟?民粹主义、反多元主义和遵守宪法的案例

IF 3.7 1区 社会学 Q1 POLITICAL SCIENCE
Jacek Lewkowicz, Rafał Woźniak, Anna Lewczuk, Mateusz Marcol
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In a series of panel regressions, we find that the longer anti-pluralists remain in power, the worse the effect they may have on constitutional compliance of the government. These results suggest that the respect for a constitution shown by government representatives is dependent on the nature of the party from which they originate and that anti-pluralism entrenched in the political scene for many years can be a real peril.KEYWORDS: constitutional economicspopulismanti-pluralismilliberalisminstitutional economics AcknowledgementsWe are grateful to two anonymous reviewers for the comments on our manuscript. We also give thanks to Christian Bjørnskov, Niclas Berggren, Jan Fałkowski, Jerg Gutmann, Bernd Hayo, Jarosław Kantorowicz, Katarzyna Metelska-Szaniawska, and Stefan Voigt for the feedback. The support of the Foundation for Polish Science (FNP) is gratefully acknowledged.Disclosure statementNo potential conflict of interest was reported by the author(s).Notes1 Urbinati, “Political Theory of Populism”; Guriev and Papaioannou, “The Political Economy of Populism.”2 North, “Institutions, Transaction Costs”; Trebilcock and Leng, “The Role of Formal Contract Law”; Lewkowicz and Lewczuk, “Civil Society and Compliance with Constitutions.”3 Voigt, “Mind the Gap”; Metelska-Szaniawska, Economic Effects of Post Socialist Constitutions; Chilton and Versteeg, “Rights Without Resources”; Bjoernskov and Mchangama, “Do Social Rights Affect Social Outcomes?”; Gutmann and Voigt, “Judicial Independence in the EU.”4 Berkowitz, Pistor, and Richard, “Economic Development”; Gavison, “What Belongs in a Constitution?”; Elkins, Ginsburg, and Melton, The Endurance of National Constitutions.5 Voigt, “Mind the Gap”; Alesina, Troiano, and Cassidy, “Old and Young Politicians”; Dal Bó et al., “Who Becomes a Politician?”6 Voigt, “Mind the Gap.”7 Guriev and Papaioannou, “The Political Economy of Populism.”8 Mudde and Kaltwasser, Populism.9 Ibid.10 Tushnet and Bugaric, Power to the People.11 Guriev and Papaioannou, “The Political Economy of Populism”; Bonikowski et al., “Populism and Nationalism.”12 Urbinati, “Political Theory of Populism”; Guriev and Papaioannou, “The Political Economy of Populism.”13 Gutmann and Rode, Are Populists Constitutionalists?14 Ibid.15 Celico, Rode, and Carreño, “Everybody is Populist to Some Extent.”16 V-Dem, V-Party and Comparative Constitutional Compliance Database.17 Müller, “Towards a Political Theory of Populism”; Aslanidis, “Is Populism an Ideology”; Mudde and Kaltwasser, Populism.18 Urbinati, “Political Theory of Populism.”19 Hawkins, “Is Chávez Populist?”20 Mudde and Kaltwasser, Populism.21 Scheppele, “The Opportunism of Populists.”22 Guriev and Papaioannou, “The Political Economy of Populism.”23 Norris and Inglehart, Cultural Backlash.24 Madrid, “The Rise of Ethnopopulism”; Acemoglu, Egorov, and Sonin, “A Political Theory of Populism.”25 Dombusch and Edwards, The Macroeconomics of Populism.26 Ibid.27 Guriev and Papaioannou, “The Political Economy of Populism.”28 Gest, Reny, and Mayer, “Roots of the Radical Right.”29 Noury and Roland, “Identity Politics and Populism.”30 See Algan et al., “The European Trust Crisis”; Boeri et al., Populism and Civil Society.31 Guriev and Papaioannou, “The Political Economy of Populism.”32 Giuliano and Wacziarg, “Who Voted for Trump?”33 Vasilopoulou, Halikiopoulou, and Exadaktylos, “Greece in Crisis.”34 Palonen, “Political Polarisation and Populism”; Lacey, “Populism and the Rule of Law.”35 Bugaric, “Populism, Liberal Democracy.”36 Gutmann and Rode, Are Populists Constitutionalists?37 Ibid.38 As defined by Tushnet and Bugaric, Power to the People; or Bugaric, “Could Populism Be Good?”39 Lührmann, Medzihorsky, and Lindberg, “Walking the Talk.”40 See Pappas, “The Specter Haunting Europe”; Lührmann, Medzihorsky, and Lindberg, “Walking the Talk”; Riedel, “Populism and its Potential.”41 Bugaric, “Could Populism Be Good?”42 Norris and Inglehart, Cultural Backlash.43 Bugaric, “Could Populism Be Good?”44 Johnson, “In Defense of Democratic Populism.”45 Scheppele, “The Opportunism of Populists.”46 Lührmann, Medzihorsky, and Lindberg, “Walking the Talk.”47 Lacey, “Populism and the Rule of Law.”48 Müller, What is Populism?; Huq, “The People Against the Constitution.”49 Urbinati, “The Populist Phenomenon.”50 Bugaric, “Populism, Liberal Democracy.”51 Müller, What is Populism?52 Huq and Ginsburg, “How to Lose a Constitutional Democracy.”53 Ibid.54 Ginsburg, Huq, and Versteeg, “The Coming Demise of Liberal Constitutionalism?”55 Núñez, Close, and Bedock, “Changing Democracy?”56 Junius et al., “Is It Interests, Ideas or Institutions?”57 Tavits and Letki, “When Left Is Right.”58 Schamis, “A ‘Left Turn’ in Latin America?”59 Tavits and Letki, “When Left Is Right.”60 See Rigobon and Rodrik, “Rule of Law, Democracy”; Boettke and Subrick, “Rule of Law, Development, and Human Capabilities”; Lewczuk, “Civil Liberties and Socio-Economic Development.”61 Chang, “Institutions and Economic Development.”62 Lewkowicz and Lewczuk, “Civil Society and Compliance with Constitutions”; Daniel, Covenant and Civil Society; Arato, Civil Society, Constitution, and Legitimacy; Voigt, “Mind the Gap”; Bugaric, “Populism, Liberal Democracy.”63 Bugaric, “Populism, Liberal Democracy.”64 Barnett and Finnemore, “The Politics, Power, and Pathologies.”65 Møller and Skaaning, “Regime Types and Democratic Sequencing”; Whitten-Woodring, “Watchdog or Lapdog?”66 Ruling parties were identified as those with a head of government and the most seats in the lower chamber. In this way the selected parties reflect the characteristics of the government of the given country.67 The upper time restriction was imposed due to data availability in the V-Party dataset.68 Gutmann, Metelska-Szaniawska, and Voigt, “The Comparative Constitutional Compliance Database.”69 Coppedge et al., V-Dem: 2022.70 Elkins, Ginsburg, and Melton, “Characteristics of National Constitutions, Version 3.0.”71 Noury and Roland, “Identity Politics and Populism in Europe.”72 Bjørnskov and Rode, “Regime Types and Regime Change.”73 Alesina, Troiano, and Cassidy, “Old and Young Politicians.”74 Baltagi, Econometric Analysis of Panel Data.75 Fariss et al., “New Estimates of Over 500 Years of Historic GDP and Population Data.”76 Gutmann and Rode, Are Populists Constitutionalists?77 The output of this exercise is available upon request.78 Gutmann and Rode, Are Populists Constitutionalists?79 Voigt, “Mind the Gap.”Additional informationFundingThis research is part of a Beethoven project funded by the Polish National Science Centre (NCN, #2016/23/G/HS4/04371) and the Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft (DFG, #381589259). The views, thoughts, and opinions expressed in the text belong solely to the authors, and not necessarily to the authors’ employer, organization, committee, or other group or individual; Narodowe Centrum Nauki.Notes on contributorsJacek LewkowiczJacek Lewkowicz is an Associate Professor at the Faculty of Economic Sciences of the University of Warsaw. His research interests include political economy, institutional economics, and law and economics.Rafał WoźniakRafał Woźniak is an Assistant Professor at the Faculty of Economic Sciences of the University of Warsaw. His research focuses on panel data methods and endogeneity in econometric models.Anna LewczukAnna Lewczuk is an Assistant Professor at the Faculty of Economic Sciences of the University of Warsaw. Her research interests are in law and economics, constitutional economics, and institutional economics.Mateusz MarcolMateusz Marcol is an undergraduate student at the Faculty of Mathematics and Natural Sciences at the University of Bonn. His research interests are in institutional economics, political economy, and mathematical logic.","PeriodicalId":47953,"journal":{"name":"Democratization","volume":null,"pages":null},"PeriodicalIF":3.7000,"publicationDate":"2023-10-10","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"","citationCount":"0","resultStr":"{\"title\":\"The longer the worse? The case of populism, anti-pluralism, and constitutional compliance\",\"authors\":\"Jacek Lewkowicz, Rafał Woźniak, Anna Lewczuk, Mateusz Marcol\",\"doi\":\"10.1080/13510347.2023.2258341\",\"DOIUrl\":null,\"url\":null,\"abstract\":\"ABSTRACTAlthough compliance with constitutions is undoubtedly one of the most essential topics in the current public debate, there are still a lot of questions about its determinants that have to be addressed. What is the impact of the populistic and anti-pluralistic character of ruling political parties on constitutional compliance of the government and does it depend on how long such parties have been in power? In our study, based on data for 147 countries during the period between 1990 and 2019, we aim to investigate the relationships between populism, anti-pluralism, and constitutional compliance, with a special focus on the years of the populist or anti-pluralistic ruling parties in office. In a series of panel regressions, we find that the longer anti-pluralists remain in power, the worse the effect they may have on constitutional compliance of the government. These results suggest that the respect for a constitution shown by government representatives is dependent on the nature of the party from which they originate and that anti-pluralism entrenched in the political scene for many years can be a real peril.KEYWORDS: constitutional economicspopulismanti-pluralismilliberalisminstitutional economics AcknowledgementsWe are grateful to two anonymous reviewers for the comments on our manuscript. We also give thanks to Christian Bjørnskov, Niclas Berggren, Jan Fałkowski, Jerg Gutmann, Bernd Hayo, Jarosław Kantorowicz, Katarzyna Metelska-Szaniawska, and Stefan Voigt for the feedback. The support of the Foundation for Polish Science (FNP) is gratefully acknowledged.Disclosure statementNo potential conflict of interest was reported by the author(s).Notes1 Urbinati, “Political Theory of Populism”; Guriev and Papaioannou, “The Political Economy of Populism.”2 North, “Institutions, Transaction Costs”; Trebilcock and Leng, “The Role of Formal Contract Law”; Lewkowicz and Lewczuk, “Civil Society and Compliance with Constitutions.”3 Voigt, “Mind the Gap”; Metelska-Szaniawska, Economic Effects of Post Socialist Constitutions; Chilton and Versteeg, “Rights Without Resources”; Bjoernskov and Mchangama, “Do Social Rights Affect Social Outcomes?”; Gutmann and Voigt, “Judicial Independence in the EU.”4 Berkowitz, Pistor, and Richard, “Economic Development”; Gavison, “What Belongs in a Constitution?”; Elkins, Ginsburg, and Melton, The Endurance of National Constitutions.5 Voigt, “Mind the Gap”; Alesina, Troiano, and Cassidy, “Old and Young Politicians”; Dal Bó et al., “Who Becomes a Politician?”6 Voigt, “Mind the Gap.”7 Guriev and Papaioannou, “The Political Economy of Populism.”8 Mudde and Kaltwasser, Populism.9 Ibid.10 Tushnet and Bugaric, Power to the People.11 Guriev and Papaioannou, “The Political Economy of Populism”; Bonikowski et al., “Populism and Nationalism.”12 Urbinati, “Political Theory of Populism”; Guriev and Papaioannou, “The Political Economy of Populism.”13 Gutmann and Rode, Are Populists Constitutionalists?14 Ibid.15 Celico, Rode, and Carreño, “Everybody is Populist to Some Extent.”16 V-Dem, V-Party and Comparative Constitutional Compliance Database.17 Müller, “Towards a Political Theory of Populism”; Aslanidis, “Is Populism an Ideology”; Mudde and Kaltwasser, Populism.18 Urbinati, “Political Theory of Populism.”19 Hawkins, “Is Chávez Populist?”20 Mudde and Kaltwasser, Populism.21 Scheppele, “The Opportunism of Populists.”22 Guriev and Papaioannou, “The Political Economy of Populism.”23 Norris and Inglehart, Cultural Backlash.24 Madrid, “The Rise of Ethnopopulism”; Acemoglu, Egorov, and Sonin, “A Political Theory of Populism.”25 Dombusch and Edwards, The Macroeconomics of Populism.26 Ibid.27 Guriev and Papaioannou, “The Political Economy of Populism.”28 Gest, Reny, and Mayer, “Roots of the Radical Right.”29 Noury and Roland, “Identity Politics and Populism.”30 See Algan et al., “The European Trust Crisis”; Boeri et al., Populism and Civil Society.31 Guriev and Papaioannou, “The Political Economy of Populism.”32 Giuliano and Wacziarg, “Who Voted for Trump?”33 Vasilopoulou, Halikiopoulou, and Exadaktylos, “Greece in Crisis.”34 Palonen, “Political Polarisation and Populism”; Lacey, “Populism and the Rule of Law.”35 Bugaric, “Populism, Liberal Democracy.”36 Gutmann and Rode, Are Populists Constitutionalists?37 Ibid.38 As defined by Tushnet and Bugaric, Power to the People; or Bugaric, “Could Populism Be Good?”39 Lührmann, Medzihorsky, and Lindberg, “Walking the Talk.”40 See Pappas, “The Specter Haunting Europe”; Lührmann, Medzihorsky, and Lindberg, “Walking the Talk”; Riedel, “Populism and its Potential.”41 Bugaric, “Could Populism Be Good?”42 Norris and Inglehart, Cultural Backlash.43 Bugaric, “Could Populism Be Good?”44 Johnson, “In Defense of Democratic Populism.”45 Scheppele, “The Opportunism of Populists.”46 Lührmann, Medzihorsky, and Lindberg, “Walking the Talk.”47 Lacey, “Populism and the Rule of Law.”48 Müller, What is Populism?; Huq, “The People Against the Constitution.”49 Urbinati, “The Populist Phenomenon.”50 Bugaric, “Populism, Liberal Democracy.”51 Müller, What is Populism?52 Huq and Ginsburg, “How to Lose a Constitutional Democracy.”53 Ibid.54 Ginsburg, Huq, and Versteeg, “The Coming Demise of Liberal Constitutionalism?”55 Núñez, Close, and Bedock, “Changing Democracy?”56 Junius et al., “Is It Interests, Ideas or Institutions?”57 Tavits and Letki, “When Left Is Right.”58 Schamis, “A ‘Left Turn’ in Latin America?”59 Tavits and Letki, “When Left Is Right.”60 See Rigobon and Rodrik, “Rule of Law, Democracy”; Boettke and Subrick, “Rule of Law, Development, and Human Capabilities”; Lewczuk, “Civil Liberties and Socio-Economic Development.”61 Chang, “Institutions and Economic Development.”62 Lewkowicz and Lewczuk, “Civil Society and Compliance with Constitutions”; Daniel, Covenant and Civil Society; Arato, Civil Society, Constitution, and Legitimacy; Voigt, “Mind the Gap”; Bugaric, “Populism, Liberal Democracy.”63 Bugaric, “Populism, Liberal Democracy.”64 Barnett and Finnemore, “The Politics, Power, and Pathologies.”65 Møller and Skaaning, “Regime Types and Democratic Sequencing”; Whitten-Woodring, “Watchdog or Lapdog?”66 Ruling parties were identified as those with a head of government and the most seats in the lower chamber. In this way the selected parties reflect the characteristics of the government of the given country.67 The upper time restriction was imposed due to data availability in the V-Party dataset.68 Gutmann, Metelska-Szaniawska, and Voigt, “The Comparative Constitutional Compliance Database.”69 Coppedge et al., V-Dem: 2022.70 Elkins, Ginsburg, and Melton, “Characteristics of National Constitutions, Version 3.0.”71 Noury and Roland, “Identity Politics and Populism in Europe.”72 Bjørnskov and Rode, “Regime Types and Regime Change.”73 Alesina, Troiano, and Cassidy, “Old and Young Politicians.”74 Baltagi, Econometric Analysis of Panel Data.75 Fariss et al., “New Estimates of Over 500 Years of Historic GDP and Population Data.”76 Gutmann and Rode, Are Populists Constitutionalists?77 The output of this exercise is available upon request.78 Gutmann and Rode, Are Populists Constitutionalists?79 Voigt, “Mind the Gap.”Additional informationFundingThis research is part of a Beethoven project funded by the Polish National Science Centre (NCN, #2016/23/G/HS4/04371) and the Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft (DFG, #381589259). The views, thoughts, and opinions expressed in the text belong solely to the authors, and not necessarily to the authors’ employer, organization, committee, or other group or individual; Narodowe Centrum Nauki.Notes on contributorsJacek LewkowiczJacek Lewkowicz is an Associate Professor at the Faculty of Economic Sciences of the University of Warsaw. His research interests include political economy, institutional economics, and law and economics.Rafał WoźniakRafał Woźniak is an Assistant Professor at the Faculty of Economic Sciences of the University of Warsaw. His research focuses on panel data methods and endogeneity in econometric models.Anna LewczukAnna Lewczuk is an Assistant Professor at the Faculty of Economic Sciences of the University of Warsaw. Her research interests are in law and economics, constitutional economics, and institutional economics.Mateusz MarcolMateusz Marcol is an undergraduate student at the Faculty of Mathematics and Natural Sciences at the University of Bonn. 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引用次数: 0

摘要

摘要虽然宪法的遵守无疑是当前公共辩论中最重要的话题之一,但关于其决定因素仍有许多问题需要解决。执政政党的民粹主义和反多元主义特征对政府的合宪性有何影响?是否与执政时间有关?在我们的研究中,基于1990年至2019年147个国家的数据,我们旨在调查民粹主义、反多元主义和宪法遵从之间的关系,并特别关注民粹主义或反多元政党执政的年份。在一系列的面板回归中,我们发现反多元主义者掌权的时间越长,他们对政府合宪性的影响就越严重。这些结果表明,政府代表对宪法的尊重取决于他们所来自的政党的性质,而在政治舞台上根深蒂固的反多元主义可能是一个真正的危险。关键词:宪法经济学民粹主义多元主义自由主义制度经济学感谢两位匿名审稿人对我们手稿的评论。我们还要感谢Christian Bjørnskov, Niclas Berggren, Jan Fałkowski, Jerg Gutmann, Bernd Hayo, Jarosław Kantorowicz, Katarzyna Metelska-Szaniawska和Stefan Voigt的反馈。感谢波兰科学基金会(FNP)的支持。披露声明作者未报告潜在的利益冲突。注1 Urbinati,“民粹主义的政治理论”;Guriev和Papaioannou,《民粹主义的政治经济学》2 North,“制度,交易成本”;Trebilcock and Leng:《形式合同法的作用》;Lewkowicz and Lewczuk,《公民社会与宪法遵从》。3 Voigt,“Mind the Gap”;Metelska-Szaniawska:后社会主义宪法的经济效应Chilton和Versteeg:《没有资源的权利》;Bjoernskov和Mchangama:“社会权利影响社会结果吗?”Gutmann和Voigt, <欧盟的司法独立>。4 Berkowitz, Pistor, and Richard,《经济发展》;加维森,《什么属于宪法?》埃尔金斯、金斯伯格和梅尔顿,《国家宪法的持久性》。5 Voigt,“注意差距”;Alesina, Troiano和Cassidy,《年老和年轻的政治家》;Dal Bó等人,“谁会成为政治家?”6 . Voigt,“注意缝隙。”7 Guriev和Papaioannou,《民粹主义的政治经济学》。8穆德和卡尔瓦瑟:《民粹主义》。9同上。10图什涅特和布加里克:《权力归于人民》。11古里耶夫和帕帕约安诺:《民粹主义的政治经济学》;博尼科夫斯基等人,《民粹主义与民族主义》。12 Urbinati,《民粹主义的政治理论》;Guriev和Papaioannou,《民粹主义的政治经济学》13古特曼和罗德:《民粹主义者是立宪主义者吗?》14同上15 Celico, Rode和Carreño,“每个人在某种程度上都是民粹主义者。[16]“V-Dem、V-Party与比较宪法遵从性数据库”。阿斯拉尼迪斯:《民粹主义是一种意识形态吗?》《论民粹主义的政治理论》。19霍金斯,Chávez是民粹主义者吗?20 Mudde and Kaltwasser,民粹主义。21 Scheppele,民粹主义者的机会主义。22 Guriev and Papaioannou,《民粹主义的政治经济学》。23诺里斯和英格哈特:《文化反弹》;24马德里:《民族民粹主义的兴起》;Acemoglu, Egorov, and Sonin, <民粹主义的政治理论>。[25]《民粹主义的宏观经济学》;[26]同上。28格斯特,雷尼,迈耶,<激进右翼的根源>。29诺伊和罗兰,《身份政治与民粹主义》。30参见Algan等人,“欧洲信任危机”;[31]古里耶夫、帕帕约安努,《民粹主义的政治经济学》。32朱利亚诺和瓦齐亚格,《谁投票给特朗普?》33 Vasilopoulou, Halikiopoulou和Exadaktylos,《危机中的希腊》34帕洛宁:《政治两极分化与民粹主义》;《民粹主义与法治》。35保加利亚,民粹主义,自由民主。36古特曼和罗德:《民粹主义者是立宪主义者吗?》37同上。38根据图什涅特和保加利亚的定义,权力归人民;或者保加利亚语,“民粹主义会好吗?”39 l<s:1>赫曼,梅兹霍斯基和林德伯格,《言出必行》。40参见帕帕斯的《幽灵萦绕欧洲》;莱尔·赫曼、梅兹霍斯基和林德伯格,《言出必行》;里德尔,《民粹主义及其潜力》41保加利亚,“民粹主义会好吗?”42 Norris和Inglehart,《文化反弹》43 Bugaric,《民粹主义会好吗?》44约翰逊,《为民主民粹主义辩护》。45谢佩尔,《民粹主义者的机会主义》。46 l<s:1>赫曼、梅兹霍斯基和林德伯格,《言出必行》。47莱西,《民粹主义与法治》。48米勒:《什么是民粹主义?》“人民反对宪法”。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
The longer the worse? The case of populism, anti-pluralism, and constitutional compliance
ABSTRACTAlthough compliance with constitutions is undoubtedly one of the most essential topics in the current public debate, there are still a lot of questions about its determinants that have to be addressed. What is the impact of the populistic and anti-pluralistic character of ruling political parties on constitutional compliance of the government and does it depend on how long such parties have been in power? In our study, based on data for 147 countries during the period between 1990 and 2019, we aim to investigate the relationships between populism, anti-pluralism, and constitutional compliance, with a special focus on the years of the populist or anti-pluralistic ruling parties in office. In a series of panel regressions, we find that the longer anti-pluralists remain in power, the worse the effect they may have on constitutional compliance of the government. These results suggest that the respect for a constitution shown by government representatives is dependent on the nature of the party from which they originate and that anti-pluralism entrenched in the political scene for many years can be a real peril.KEYWORDS: constitutional economicspopulismanti-pluralismilliberalisminstitutional economics AcknowledgementsWe are grateful to two anonymous reviewers for the comments on our manuscript. We also give thanks to Christian Bjørnskov, Niclas Berggren, Jan Fałkowski, Jerg Gutmann, Bernd Hayo, Jarosław Kantorowicz, Katarzyna Metelska-Szaniawska, and Stefan Voigt for the feedback. The support of the Foundation for Polish Science (FNP) is gratefully acknowledged.Disclosure statementNo potential conflict of interest was reported by the author(s).Notes1 Urbinati, “Political Theory of Populism”; Guriev and Papaioannou, “The Political Economy of Populism.”2 North, “Institutions, Transaction Costs”; Trebilcock and Leng, “The Role of Formal Contract Law”; Lewkowicz and Lewczuk, “Civil Society and Compliance with Constitutions.”3 Voigt, “Mind the Gap”; Metelska-Szaniawska, Economic Effects of Post Socialist Constitutions; Chilton and Versteeg, “Rights Without Resources”; Bjoernskov and Mchangama, “Do Social Rights Affect Social Outcomes?”; Gutmann and Voigt, “Judicial Independence in the EU.”4 Berkowitz, Pistor, and Richard, “Economic Development”; Gavison, “What Belongs in a Constitution?”; Elkins, Ginsburg, and Melton, The Endurance of National Constitutions.5 Voigt, “Mind the Gap”; Alesina, Troiano, and Cassidy, “Old and Young Politicians”; Dal Bó et al., “Who Becomes a Politician?”6 Voigt, “Mind the Gap.”7 Guriev and Papaioannou, “The Political Economy of Populism.”8 Mudde and Kaltwasser, Populism.9 Ibid.10 Tushnet and Bugaric, Power to the People.11 Guriev and Papaioannou, “The Political Economy of Populism”; Bonikowski et al., “Populism and Nationalism.”12 Urbinati, “Political Theory of Populism”; Guriev and Papaioannou, “The Political Economy of Populism.”13 Gutmann and Rode, Are Populists Constitutionalists?14 Ibid.15 Celico, Rode, and Carreño, “Everybody is Populist to Some Extent.”16 V-Dem, V-Party and Comparative Constitutional Compliance Database.17 Müller, “Towards a Political Theory of Populism”; Aslanidis, “Is Populism an Ideology”; Mudde and Kaltwasser, Populism.18 Urbinati, “Political Theory of Populism.”19 Hawkins, “Is Chávez Populist?”20 Mudde and Kaltwasser, Populism.21 Scheppele, “The Opportunism of Populists.”22 Guriev and Papaioannou, “The Political Economy of Populism.”23 Norris and Inglehart, Cultural Backlash.24 Madrid, “The Rise of Ethnopopulism”; Acemoglu, Egorov, and Sonin, “A Political Theory of Populism.”25 Dombusch and Edwards, The Macroeconomics of Populism.26 Ibid.27 Guriev and Papaioannou, “The Political Economy of Populism.”28 Gest, Reny, and Mayer, “Roots of the Radical Right.”29 Noury and Roland, “Identity Politics and Populism.”30 See Algan et al., “The European Trust Crisis”; Boeri et al., Populism and Civil Society.31 Guriev and Papaioannou, “The Political Economy of Populism.”32 Giuliano and Wacziarg, “Who Voted for Trump?”33 Vasilopoulou, Halikiopoulou, and Exadaktylos, “Greece in Crisis.”34 Palonen, “Political Polarisation and Populism”; Lacey, “Populism and the Rule of Law.”35 Bugaric, “Populism, Liberal Democracy.”36 Gutmann and Rode, Are Populists Constitutionalists?37 Ibid.38 As defined by Tushnet and Bugaric, Power to the People; or Bugaric, “Could Populism Be Good?”39 Lührmann, Medzihorsky, and Lindberg, “Walking the Talk.”40 See Pappas, “The Specter Haunting Europe”; Lührmann, Medzihorsky, and Lindberg, “Walking the Talk”; Riedel, “Populism and its Potential.”41 Bugaric, “Could Populism Be Good?”42 Norris and Inglehart, Cultural Backlash.43 Bugaric, “Could Populism Be Good?”44 Johnson, “In Defense of Democratic Populism.”45 Scheppele, “The Opportunism of Populists.”46 Lührmann, Medzihorsky, and Lindberg, “Walking the Talk.”47 Lacey, “Populism and the Rule of Law.”48 Müller, What is Populism?; Huq, “The People Against the Constitution.”49 Urbinati, “The Populist Phenomenon.”50 Bugaric, “Populism, Liberal Democracy.”51 Müller, What is Populism?52 Huq and Ginsburg, “How to Lose a Constitutional Democracy.”53 Ibid.54 Ginsburg, Huq, and Versteeg, “The Coming Demise of Liberal Constitutionalism?”55 Núñez, Close, and Bedock, “Changing Democracy?”56 Junius et al., “Is It Interests, Ideas or Institutions?”57 Tavits and Letki, “When Left Is Right.”58 Schamis, “A ‘Left Turn’ in Latin America?”59 Tavits and Letki, “When Left Is Right.”60 See Rigobon and Rodrik, “Rule of Law, Democracy”; Boettke and Subrick, “Rule of Law, Development, and Human Capabilities”; Lewczuk, “Civil Liberties and Socio-Economic Development.”61 Chang, “Institutions and Economic Development.”62 Lewkowicz and Lewczuk, “Civil Society and Compliance with Constitutions”; Daniel, Covenant and Civil Society; Arato, Civil Society, Constitution, and Legitimacy; Voigt, “Mind the Gap”; Bugaric, “Populism, Liberal Democracy.”63 Bugaric, “Populism, Liberal Democracy.”64 Barnett and Finnemore, “The Politics, Power, and Pathologies.”65 Møller and Skaaning, “Regime Types and Democratic Sequencing”; Whitten-Woodring, “Watchdog or Lapdog?”66 Ruling parties were identified as those with a head of government and the most seats in the lower chamber. In this way the selected parties reflect the characteristics of the government of the given country.67 The upper time restriction was imposed due to data availability in the V-Party dataset.68 Gutmann, Metelska-Szaniawska, and Voigt, “The Comparative Constitutional Compliance Database.”69 Coppedge et al., V-Dem: 2022.70 Elkins, Ginsburg, and Melton, “Characteristics of National Constitutions, Version 3.0.”71 Noury and Roland, “Identity Politics and Populism in Europe.”72 Bjørnskov and Rode, “Regime Types and Regime Change.”73 Alesina, Troiano, and Cassidy, “Old and Young Politicians.”74 Baltagi, Econometric Analysis of Panel Data.75 Fariss et al., “New Estimates of Over 500 Years of Historic GDP and Population Data.”76 Gutmann and Rode, Are Populists Constitutionalists?77 The output of this exercise is available upon request.78 Gutmann and Rode, Are Populists Constitutionalists?79 Voigt, “Mind the Gap.”Additional informationFundingThis research is part of a Beethoven project funded by the Polish National Science Centre (NCN, #2016/23/G/HS4/04371) and the Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft (DFG, #381589259). The views, thoughts, and opinions expressed in the text belong solely to the authors, and not necessarily to the authors’ employer, organization, committee, or other group or individual; Narodowe Centrum Nauki.Notes on contributorsJacek LewkowiczJacek Lewkowicz is an Associate Professor at the Faculty of Economic Sciences of the University of Warsaw. His research interests include political economy, institutional economics, and law and economics.Rafał WoźniakRafał Woźniak is an Assistant Professor at the Faculty of Economic Sciences of the University of Warsaw. His research focuses on panel data methods and endogeneity in econometric models.Anna LewczukAnna Lewczuk is an Assistant Professor at the Faculty of Economic Sciences of the University of Warsaw. Her research interests are in law and economics, constitutional economics, and institutional economics.Mateusz MarcolMateusz Marcol is an undergraduate student at the Faculty of Mathematics and Natural Sciences at the University of Bonn. His research interests are in institutional economics, political economy, and mathematical logic.
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来源期刊
Democratization
Democratization POLITICAL SCIENCE-
CiteScore
6.40
自引率
12.50%
发文量
73
期刊介绍: Democratization aims to promote a better understanding of democratization - defined as the way democratic norms, institutions and practices evolve and are disseminated both within and across national and cultural boundaries. While the focus is on democratization viewed as a process, the journal also builds on the enduring interest in democracy itself and its analysis. The emphasis is contemporary and the approach comparative, with the publication of scholarly contributions about those areas where democratization is currently attracting considerable attention world-wide.
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