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Democracy Incongruence and ProtestDemocracy Incongruence and Protest

Other Titles
Democracy Incongruence and Protest
Authors
우정무이재철
Issue Date
Dec-2020
Publisher
서울대학교 국제학연구소
Keywords
democracy incongruence; economic development; civil liberties; protests.
Citation
Journal of International and Area Studies, v.27, no.2, pp 19 - 36
Pages
18
Indexed
KCI
Journal Title
Journal of International and Area Studies
Volume
27
Number
2
Start Page
19
End Page
36
URI
https://scholarworks.dongguk.edu/handle/sw.dongguk/5820
DOI
10.23071/jias.2020.27.2.19
ISSN
1226-8550
2765-1800
Abstract
The literature on protest argues that economic grievances against the government increase the likelihood of a protest. However, the literature offers little explanation for why some states with good economic performance, such as South Korea and China in the 1980s, experienced severe protests. This study suggests that even though a state has a high income level, if its political institutions do not satisfy citizens’ demands for democracy caused by economic development, citizens would have political grievances against their government. If citizens share such political grievances, their civil society would have the group-level perception of discrepancy between their demand for democracy and their government’s institutional supply of political rights, called democracy incongruence. As the level of democracy incongruence in a state increases, the citizens are willing to participate in protest to express political grievances against the government. Empirical results support this argument.
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