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Understandings of Democracy examines why democracy is in trouble in today's world, even when most people profess to love democracy. Jie Lu and Yun-han Chu argue that people hold distinct understandings of democracy, and popular understandings of democracy have critically shaped how citizens respond to authoritarian or populist practices in contemporary politics. Using large-scale comparative surveys and survey experiments from seventy-two societies and a national survey in the United States, this book captures how people respond when presented with the tradeoffs between the intrinsic and…mehr

Produktbeschreibung
Understandings of Democracy examines why democracy is in trouble in today's world, even when most people profess to love democracy. Jie Lu and Yun-han Chu argue that people hold distinct understandings of democracy, and popular understandings of democracy have critically shaped how citizens respond to authoritarian or populist practices in contemporary politics. Using large-scale comparative surveys and survey experiments from seventy-two societies and a national survey in the United States, this book captures how people respond when presented with the tradeoffs between the intrinsic and instrumental values of democracy, as well as the attitudinal and behavioral implications of such responses.
Autorenporträt
Jie Lu is Ye Chenghai Chair Professor of Political Science at the Renmin University of China. Before joining the Renmin University, he taught at American University in Washington, DC. He studies local governance, the political economy of institutional change, public opinion, and political participation. His regional expertise focuses on the Greater China Region and East Asia. His work has appeared in Comparative Political Studies, Comparative Politics, Political Psychology, Politics & Society, Political Communication, Journal of Democracy, and other journals. He is also the author of Varieties of Governance in China: Migration and Institutional Change in Chinese Villages. Yun-han Chu is an academician of Academia Sinica, Distinguished Research Fellow of the Institute of Political Science at Academia Sinica, and Professor of Political Science at National Taiwan University. He serves concurrently as President of Chiang Ching-kuo Foundation for International Scholarly Exchange. He is the founder and director of Asian Barometer Survey, a cross-national survey on political values, citizen politics, and the quality of democracy covering 19 Asian societies. He is the author, co-author, editor, or co-editor of seventeen books. Among his recent English publications are Democracy in East Asia: A New Century, Dynamics of Democracy in Taiwan: The Ma Ying-jeou Years, and The Decline of the Western-Centric World and the Emerging New Global Order.