拉丁美洲官僚的民粹主义态度和对民主的支持

Mona Lyne, Tayla Ingles, Celeste Beesley, Annie Ackerman, Darren Hawkins
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引用次数: 0

摘要

尽管宏观层面的模式将民粹主义者执政与民主倒退联系在一起,但目前还不清楚民粹主义者的态度如何与个人对民主的态度相关联。学者们最近才开始关注这一问题,但结果并不确定。利用我们对拉丁美洲官僚的独特调查,我们研究了民粹主义在官僚中是如何运作的。我们分别分析了民粹主义的三个方面(反精英主义、亲民倾向和摩尼教主义)。最近有学者发现民粹主义者是不满意的民主派,在此基础上,我们研究了对民粹主义各维度的态度与民主满意度和支持度之间的关系。我们采用两种民主满意度测量方法和四种民主支持度测量方法(包括对行政制衡的支持度)对当前的研究进行了扩展。我们发现,那些在民粹主义基本维度上得分较高的人对民主质量的评价较低,但对本国民主制度的满意度并不低。 我们还发现,那些持亲民态度的人始终支持民主,包括对行政的制衡。相反,持摩尼教观点的人对民主的支持度较低,并赞成增加行政权力。这些复杂性表明,有必要对民粹主义的概念进行更多的研究,同时也表明有必要了解重要社会群体,尤其是机构行为者的态度与整体人口的态度有何不同。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Populist attitudes and support for democracy among Latin American bureaucrats
Despite macro-level patterns that link populists in power with democratic backsliding, it is unclear how populist attitudes correlate with attitudes about democracy among individuals. Scholars have only recently turned their attention to this issue and produced inconclusive results. Using our unique survey of Latin American bureaucrats, we investigate how populism operates among bureaucrats, a set of actors with a crucial role in democratic governance. We analyze each of three dimensions of populism separately (anti-elitism, pro-people orientation and Manicheanism). Building on recent scholarship finding that populists are dissatisfied democrats, we examine the relationship between attitudes about each dimension of populism and satisfaction with and support for democracy. We extend current scholarship by deploying two measures of satisfaction with and four measures of support for democracy, including support for checks on the executive. We find that those scoring high on underlying dimensions of populism rate the quality of democracy lower but are not less satisfied with the system in their countries.  We also find that those with pro-people attitudes consistently support democracy, including checks on the executive. Those with a Manichean outlook, in contrast, are less supportive of democracy and favor increased executive powers. These complexities suggest the need for more research on the concept of populism, as well as supporting the need for understanding how attitudes among important social groups, particularly institutional actors, may differ from the overall population.
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