TY - JOUR
T1 - Beyond elections
T2 - perceptions of democracy in four Arab countries
AU - Teti, Andrea
AU - Abbott, Pamela
AU - Cavatorta, Francesco
N1 - Acknowledgements
This article is based on work carried out as part of the Arab Transformations Project. We would like to acknowledge the work of the partners on the project and especially the in- country partners that carried out the surveys.
Funding
The Arab Transformations Project, Political and Social Transformations in the Arab World, was funded under the European Commission’s FP7 Framework [grant agreement number 320214].
Data availability
The Arab Barometer and Arab Transformations data sets are publicly available to freely
download and use in SPSS and STATA.
Arab Barometer III: http://www.arabbarometer.org/waves/arab-barometer-wave-iii/
Arab Barometer IV: http://www.arabbarometer.org/survey-data/data-downloads/
Arab Transformations: https://www.arabtrans.eu/publications-and-reports-/reports/
PY - 2019/6
Y1 - 2019/6
N2 - This article draws on public opinion survey data from Morocco, Tunisia, Egypt, and Jordan to investigate first, whether a “demand for democracy” in the region exists; second, how to measure it; and third, how respondents understand it. The picture emerging from this analysis is complex, eluding the simple dichotomy between prima facie support and second order incongruence with democracy, which characterises current debates. Respondents have a more holistic understanding of democracy than is found in current scholarship or indeed pursued by Western or regional policymakers, valuing civil-political rights but prioritizing socio-economic rights. There is broad consensus behind principles of gender equality, but indirect questions reveal the continuing influence of conservative and patriarchal attitudes. Respondents value religion, but do not trust religious leaders or want them to meddle in elections or government. Moreover, while there is broad support for conventionally-understood pillars of liberal democracy (free elections, a parliamentary system), there is also a significant gap between those who support democracy as the best political system in principle and those who also believe it is actually suitable for their country.
AB - This article draws on public opinion survey data from Morocco, Tunisia, Egypt, and Jordan to investigate first, whether a “demand for democracy” in the region exists; second, how to measure it; and third, how respondents understand it. The picture emerging from this analysis is complex, eluding the simple dichotomy between prima facie support and second order incongruence with democracy, which characterises current debates. Respondents have a more holistic understanding of democracy than is found in current scholarship or indeed pursued by Western or regional policymakers, valuing civil-political rights but prioritizing socio-economic rights. There is broad consensus behind principles of gender equality, but indirect questions reveal the continuing influence of conservative and patriarchal attitudes. Respondents value religion, but do not trust religious leaders or want them to meddle in elections or government. Moreover, while there is broad support for conventionally-understood pillars of liberal democracy (free elections, a parliamentary system), there is also a significant gap between those who support democracy as the best political system in principle and those who also believe it is actually suitable for their country.
KW - democracy
KW - survey research
KW - economic rights
KW - Arab region
KW - values
KW - attitudes
UR - http://www.mendeley.com/research/beyond-elections-perceptions-democracy-four-arab-countries
UR - https://abdn.pure.elsevier.com/en/en/researchoutput/beyond-elections(0929edf2-9a51-4882-956c-1f63c7cd4e18).html
U2 - 10.1080/13510347.2019.1566903
DO - 10.1080/13510347.2019.1566903
M3 - Article
VL - 26
SP - 645
EP - 665
JO - Democratization
JF - Democratization
SN - 1351-0347
IS - 4
ER -