Cambridge Journals Online

Cambridge Journals Online
Skip to content
PS: Political Science & Politics (2003), 36 : 51-57 Cambridge University Press
Copyright © 2003 by the American Political Science Association
doi:10.1017/S1049096503001689
Published online by Cambridge University Press 30 Jan 2003
Political Science and Politics (2003), 36:1:51-57 American Political Science Association
Copyright © 2003 by the American Political Science Association
doi:10.1017/S1049096503001689

FEATURES

How Solid is Mass Support for Democracy—And How Can We Measure It?


Ronald Inglehart a1
a1 professor of political science and program director in the Institute for Social Research at the University of Michigan. He can be contacted at rfi@umich.edu

Abstract

A decade has passed since the Third Wave of democratization brought an avalanche of new, relatively unstable democracies into being, raising the question, “How solid is support for democracy in these countries?” In the intervening years, public support for democracy has faded in some countries, many of which are democratic in name only. It is unclear how long even the pretense of electoral democracy will survive in the Soviet successor states, apart from the Baltics (Brzezinski 2001). The prospects for democracy in Islamic countries seem particularly poor, with some writers arguing that the basic values of Islamic publics may be incompatible with liberal democracy (Huntington 1993, 1996). This article examines this claim, using the 1999–2001 wave of the World Values Survey, which includes 10 Islamic countries, making it possible for the first time to compare the Islamic world with other major cultural zones. We find surprisingly widespread support for democracy among Islamic publics—at least by conventional measures.



back to top
Cambridge University Press