Overview of Political Behavior
Overview of Political Behavior
This chapter summarizes our growing understanding of how contemporary publics think
about politics, develop their basic political values, and participate in the political
process. An expanding collection of public opinion data is one of the major
accomplishments in comparative political behavior over the past several decades (see
Kittilson 2007; Heath, Fisher, and Smith 2005). The Civic Culture (Almond and Verba
1963) was a dramatic step forward in comparative research by studying the publics in
five nations. Today, institutionalized or semi-institutionalized cross-national surveys are
repeated regularly, some with a near-global scope. The European Commission
sponsors the Eurobarometer surveys in the member states of the European Union. A
New Europe Barometer, Latinobarometer, Afrobarometer, East Asia Barometer, and
AsiaBarometer survey citizens in these regions. Separate research consortiums
regularly conduct the European Values Study (EVS), the International Social Survey
Program (ISSP), the European Social Survey (ESS), and the Comparative Study of
Electoral Systems (CSES). The largest number of nations is included in the World
Values Surveys (WVS), which launched a fifth wave in 2005–7. In short, over the past
few decades comparative political behavior has become a very “data-rich” field of
research.
These new developments provide distinctive opportunities to test old theories, expand
the boundaries of knowledge, and develop new theories. We normally observe political
systems in a state of equilibrium, when stability and incremental change dominate our
findings. Now we can examine questions of political change and adaptation that often
go to the heart of theoretical interests, but which we could seldom observe directly in
earlier times.
This chapter reviews some of the major research debates and empirical findings in the
study of citizen political behavior in broad cross-national terms, drawing upon the
compilation in the Oxford Handbook of Political Behavior (Dalton and Klingemann
2007).
One of the enduring research debates in political behavior involves basic questions
about the public’s political abilities—their level of knowledge, understanding, and
interest in political matters. For voters to make meaningful decisions, they must
understand the options the polity faces. Citizens must have a sufficient knowledge of
the workings of the political system if they intend to influence and control the actions of
their representatives. Almond and Verba (1963), for example, considered cognition
important in defining a political culture, and Dahl (1989, 307–8) stressed the quality of
the political debate as a precondition to arrive at what he has called “enlightened
understanding.”
Debates about the political abilities of the public remain one of the major controversies
in political behavior research. The early empirical surveys found that the public’s
political sophistication fell short of the theoretical ideal even in the established
democracies (Campbell et al. 1960; Converse 1964; Butler and Stokes 1969). For most
citizens, political interest and involvement barely seemed to extend beyond casting an
occasional vote in national elections. Furthermore, people apparently brought very little
understanding to their political participation. It was not clear that voting decisions were
based on rational evaluations of candidates, parties, and their issue positions.
This image of the uninformed and unsophisticated voter reshaped the view of the
citizenry and democratic politics (Campbell et al. 1960; Delli Carpini and Keeter 1996).
Some experts argued that if the bulk of the public is unsophisticated, it is better for
democracy that people remain politically uninvolved. And if this was beneficial to
democracy, other scholars were anxious to argue the pitfalls of too excessive political
mobilization and the benefits of political order in less developed nations (Zakaria 2006).
This debate has continued until the present (Lewis-Beck et al. 2008; Kuklinski and
Peyton 2007; Converse 2007; Friedman 2006; Kinder 2006; Hibbing and Theiss-Morse
2002). Some research claims that political information and engagement remain limited
even in Western democracies (Delli Carpini and Keeter 1996; Wattenberg 2006;
Putnam 2000; Hardin 2006). If knowledge were limited in established democracies with
affluent and educated publics, then the potential for active citizenship in developing
nations would appear even more limited.
In short, one school of research argues the glass is half empty, and going down; the
opposite school argues the glass is half full, and going up. This political science
prestidigitation—to have both things happen at once—is often based on analyses of the
same public opinion surveys. The resolution of this question has fundamental
implications for how we think about political behavior and the citizens’ role in the
democratic process. For instance, if one believes that the instruments of democracy
should be expanded, this makes assumptions about the citizenry’s ability to make
informed political choices.
Other public opinion research suggests a different way of thinking about this question.
Rather than asking if voters meet the ideal expectations of democratic theorists, which
has often been the implicit standard, we should recognize that people regularly make
political choices and ask how these choices are actually made. Bowler and Donovan
(1998, 30 f.) aptly put it this way: “Voters, to use an analogy, may know very little about
the workings of the internal combustion engine, but they do know how to drive. And
while we might say that early voting studies focused on voter ignorance of the engine,
the newer studies pay more attention to the ability to drive.” Thus, many studies (such
as Mutz, this volume; Sniderman and Levendusky 2007) ask the pragmatic question of
how people make life decisions—including whom to vote for in the next election.
Research on information cues argues that what citizens need to reach a meaningful
political choice is less than once theorized. Quite naturally, citizens economize their
investment in the information they need to make meaningful decisions and most of them
optimize this investment in ways that keep democracies working (Lau and Redlawsk
2006; Lupia and McCubbins 1998; Popkin 1991). People in Western democracies now
live in an information-rich environment which provides lots of cues on how people like
oneself should vote or act on political issues. In short, citizens often use information
shortcuts, cues, emotions, heuristics, and other methods to reach reasonable choices.
Reasonable choices, when structured by institutions and cumulated across the
electorate, lead to reasonable democratic outcomes (Surowiecki 2004). Admittedly cues
and heuristics have limitations and are not the ideal way of making political choices, but
they can be a sufficient method to make reasonable choices.
Furthermore, as public opinion studies have spread to developing nations and new
democracies, they uncover higher levels of interest and awareness than was originally
expected by the early political culture research (e.g. Bratton, Mattes, and Gyimah-Boadi
2004; Chu et al. 2008). In the modern world, more citizens are politically aware and
interested in the affairs of government because those affairs affect their daily lives.
One of the most powerful social science concepts to emerge in political behavior
research—and one central to the study of citizen attitudes and behavior—is the concept
of political culture. Almond and Verba’s (1963) seminal study, The Civic Culture,
contended that the institutions and patterns of action in a political system are closely
linked to the political culture of the nation. The culture, in turn, is shaped by the
historical, economic, and social conditions of a nation. Cultural studies are especially
important in the study of democratization, as analysts try to identify the cultural
requisites of democracy (Almond and Verba 1963; Pye and Verba 1965; Fuchs 2007).
Despite the heuristic and interpretative power of the concept of political culture, there
are recurring questions about the precision and predictive power of the concept (Laitin
1995). Kaase (1983), for instance, said that measuring political culture is like “trying to
nail jello to the wall.” That is, the concept lacked precision and often became a
subjective, stereotypic description of a nation rather than an empirically measurable
concept. Some analysts saw political culture in virtually every feature of political life;
others viewed it merely as a residual category that explained what remained
unexplainable by other means. Even more problematic was the uneven evidence of
culture’s causal effect.
The 1990s witnessed a renaissance of political culture research and emphasized the
link between modernization and political behavior. Inglehart demonstrated the
congruence between broad political attitudes and democratic stability for twentytwo
nations in the 1981 World Values Survey (Inglehart 1990). Putnam’s (1993) study of
regional governments in Italy provided even more impressive testimony in support of
cultural theory. Putnam demonstrated that the cultural traditions of a region—roughly
contrasting the cooperative political style of the North to the more hierarchic tradition of
the South—were a potent predictor of the performance of contemporary governments.
These studies generated counter-findings, and a new (p. 326) research debate
emerged (e.g. Inglehart 1997; Reisinger 1995; Jackman and Miller 1996).
Moreover, the democratization wave of the 1990s focused attention on the connection
between modernization and political culture. To what extent did political transformation
in Central and Eastern Europe arise from gradual changes in the political culture? More
important politically, to what extent can the prospects for democracy be judged by their
public’s support for democratic politics? Public opinion surveys of the Russian public
initially found surprisingly high levels of support for basic democratic principles in the
former Soviet Union (Miller, Reisinger, and Hesli 1993; Gibson, Duch, and Tedin 1992;
Zimmerman 2002). Researchers in other Central and Eastern European nations
examined the role of political culture in prompting the transitions and the consolidation
of democracy (Rose, Haerpfer, and Mishler 1998; Rohrschneider 1999; Klingemann,
Fuchs, and Zielonka 2006). Rather than the apathy or hostility that greeted democracy
after transitions from right-wing authoritarian states, the cultural legacy of Communism
in Central and Eastern Europe appears to be very different.
An equally rich series of studies is emerging for Asia, Africa, Latin America, and other
developing regions. Despite the potential effects of conservative Confucian traditions
and the government’s hesitant support for democracy in many nations, the cultural
foundations of democracy also are well developed in many Asian societies (Dalton and
Shin 2006; Chu et al. 2008). Perhaps the most exciting evidence comes from studies of
the People’s Republic of China. Even in this hostile environment, there is surprising
support for an array of democratic principles (Tang 2005). Similarly, the Afrobarometers
provide the first systematic comparisons of public opinion on this continent, and the
nature of political behavior in these developing nations (Bratton, Mattes, and Gyimah-
Boadi 2004). New projects examine the political culture across Latin America (Booth
and Seligson 2008; Lagos 1997). The breadth of support for democracy visible across a
range of international survey projects—even in less than hospitable environments—is a
surprising finding from this new wave of research (Shin 2007), and suggests that the
aspiration for freedom, equality, and democratic rights is a common human value. One
might question whether these opinions are sufficiently ingrained to constitute an
enduring political culture in many developing nations, but even abstract endorsements
of democratic norms are a positive sign about the prospects for democratic reform (van
Beek 2005).
This research has also stimulated new debates on the broad course of human
development. On the one hand, new versions of the social modernization thesis suggest
a common pattern of social and political change as nations develop economically. This
is most clearly seen in the analyses by Inglehart and Welzel (2005). On the other hand,
others claim that historical experiences and national traditions produce different patterns
of cultural development and distinct cultural regions—which may produce new sources
of regional conflict (Huntington 1996). While this debate is ongoing, its very existence
illustrates how the broadening of systematic opinion research to developing nations has
renewed old debates about the courses and consequences of political culture.
(p. 327) As questions about political culture have grown in relevance for the
democratizing nations, important cultural changes have also emerged within the
advanced industrial democracies. Inglehart’s (1977; 1990) thesis of postmaterial value
change maintains that the socioeconomic forces transforming Western industrial
societies are creating a new phase of human development. As affluent democracies
have addressed many of the traditional “material” social goals, such as economic well-
being and security, other political values are increasing attention toward new
“postmaterial” goals of self-expression, personal freedom, social equality, self-
fulfillment, and improving the quality of life. Inglehart’s postmaterial thesis has gained
considerable attention because of its potentially broad relevance to the politics of
advanced industrial societies, although this thesis has also generated much scholarly
debate (van Deth and Scarborough 1995).
Second, as the empirical evidence has grown, it is also apparent that we are living
through a period of substantial political change—in both the advanced industrial
democracies and the developing nations. This pattern presents several challenges for
researchers. Normally, political institutions and the basic principles of a regime are
constant; thus it is difficult to study the interaction between institutional and cultural
change. However, the recent shifts in regime form in many nations create new
opportunities to study the relationship between culture and institutional choices—and
how congruence is established. Changing political norms enable us to study political
culture as a dynamic process. Attempts to test theories of cultural change or theories on
the nonpolitical origins of political culture are fertile research fields during this unusual
period of political change.
(p. 328) Finally, the democratization process and changing democratic expectations in
the West raise other questions. There is not just one “civic culture” that is congruent
with the working of a democratic system. Experience suggests that there are various
democratic cultures, as well as ways to define culture, that require mapping and further
study. Just as the institutionalists have drawn our attention to the variations in the
structure of the democratic politics and the implications of these differences (Rhodes,
Binder, and Rockman 2006), we need to develop a comparable understanding of how
citizen norms can create and sustain alternative democratic forms (Fuchs and
Klingemann 2002).
3 Electoral Behavior
One of the central roles of citizens in democracies and other political systems is to
make decisions about political matters. In democracies, this involves decisions about
which parties or candidates to support in an election, as well as decisions about which
issue positions to hold, how to participate in politics, and so forth. In other political
systems, the choices are different, but the task of making a choice remains. In an
autocratic system, the choice might be between making an openly affirmative statement
to a government declaration, remaining silent about it, or subtly even criticizing it. In any
case, citizens make choices when political issues are brought to their attention, whether
in an autocratic or a democratic system.
In democratic systems electoral choices are at the center of the political process. Thus,
the study of electoral choice has quite naturally been a core theme in political behavior
research, and past research has produced dramatic advances in our knowledge about
how voters reach their decisions. Early electoral research presumed that many voters
were ill prepared to deal with the complexities of politics; thus voters relied on shortcuts
—such as group cues or affective partisan loyalties—to simplify political decision-
making and guide their individual behavior (Campbell et al. 1960; Lipset and Rokkan
1967; Lewis-Beck et al. 2008). This approach also stressed the underlying stability of
party competition because people supposedly based their political decisions on
enduring social cleavages, and stable party–voter alignments were a focus of research.
During the 1980s, this model of stable cleavage-based or partisanship-based voting first
came under challenge. Within a decade the dominant question changed from explaining
the persistence of electoral politics to explaining electoral change (Dalton, Flanagan,
and Beck 1984). Decreases in class and religious divisions were a first prominent
indicator that electoral politics was changing. Franklin, Mackie, and Valen (1992) found
that a set of social characteristics (including social class, education, income, religiosity,
region, and gender) had a decreasing impact on partisan preferences in Western
democracies over time. A general erosion of class voting occurred in most (p. 329)
established democracies (Nieuwbeerta 1995; Knutsen 2006). Franklin concluded with
the new “conventional wisdom” of comparative electoral research: “One thing that has
by now become quite apparent is that almost all of the countries we have studied show
a decline … in the ability of social cleavages to structure individual voting choice”
(Franklin, Mackie, and Valen 1992, 385).
One of the major findings from the last generation of electoral research holds that social
position no longer determines political positions as it did when social alignments were
solidly frozen (cf. Evans 1999; Manza and Brooks 1999). In many Western
democracies, the declining influence of group cleavages on electoral choice is
paralleled by a weakening of affective party attachment that was the basis of the
Michigan model of electoral choice. In nearly all the advanced industrial democracies for
which long-term survey data are now available, partisan ties have weakened over the
past generation (Dalton and Wattenberg 2000). Similarly, there has been a decrease in
party-line voting and an increase in partisan volatility, split-ticket voting, and other
phenomena showing that fewer citizens are voting according to a party or group-
determined line (Thomassen 2005).
Electoral change also increases the potential for issue voting (Franklin, Mackie, and
Valen 1992; Evans and Norris 1999; Dalton 2008). There appears to be a consensus
that issue voting has become more important, but there is less consensus on a
theoretical framework for understanding the role of issues in contemporary political
behavior. A large part of the literature continues to work within the social-psychological
approach, examining how specific issues affect party choice in specific elections, or how
issue beliefs are formed. Other scholars focus on the systemic level, examining how
aggregate electoral outcomes can be predicted by the issue stances of the parties
(Budge and Farlie 1983; Adams, Merrill, and Grofman 2005). In a sense, this part of the
research literature reminds us of the story of the blind men and the elephant: Several
different research groups are making progress in explaining their part of the pachyderm,
but there is not a holistic vision of the role of issues for contemporary electoral choice.
For advanced industrial democracies, the increase in candidate and issue voting has an
uncertain impact on the democratic electoral process. It is unclear whether these
changes will improve or weaken the “quality” of the democracy and the representation
of the public’s political interests. Public opinion is becoming more fluid and less
predictable. This uncertainty forces parties and candidates to be more sensitive to
public opinion, at least the opinions of those who vote. Motivated issue voters are more
likely to have their voices heard, even if they are not accepted. Furthermore, the ability
of politicians to have unmediated communications with voters can (p. 330) strengthen
the link between politicians and the people. To some extent, the individualization of
electoral choice revives earlier images of the informed voter classic democratic theory
emphasized. Models of rational voter choice have thus gained in credibility.
At the same time, there is a potential dark side to these new patterns in electoral
politics. The rise of single-issue politics handicaps a society’s ability to deal with political
issues that transcend specific interests and require trade-offs with other interests. In
addition, elites who only cater to attentive publics can leave the electorally inactive
without a voice. Too great an interest in a single issue, or too much emphasis on recent
performance, can produce a narrow definition of rationality that is as harmful to
democracy as “frozen” social cleavages. In addition, direct unmediated contact between
politicians and citizens opens the potential for demagoguery and political extremism.
Both extreme right-wing and left-wing political movements probably benefit from this
new political environment, at least in the short term. At the same time as the electorate
is less stable on the basis of established party alignments, it is also more susceptible to
potential media manipulation.
These new democratic systems face the task of developing a relatively stable and
institutionalized basis of party competition. This is largely a problem of the nature of elite
politics, but also the lack of strong social bases for political parties. Without more
structure, it is difficult for citizens to learn about the policy choices available to them,
and translate this into meaningful electoral choices. Without more structure, it is difficult
to ensure accountability in the democratic process. This situation presents the unique
opportunity to study this process to examine how new party attachments take root, the
relationships between social groups and parties form, party images develop, and
citizens learn the process of representative democracy. However, the creation of party
systems in the world of global television, greater knowledge about electoral politics
(from the elite and public levels), and fundamentally different electorates are unlikely to
follow the pattern of earlier democratization periods.
4 Political Participation
Democratic or not, all polities expect some public involvement in the political process, if
only to obey political orders. Democracy, however, expects more active involvement
than a nondemocratic order because democracy is designed to aggregate public
preferences into binding collective decisions. Necessarily this requires an active
citizenry, because it is through interest articulation, information, and deliberation that
public preferences can be identified, shaped, and transformed into collective decisions
that are considered legitimate. Autocratic regimes also engage the public in the political
process, although this is primarily to indoctrinate the public to conform to decisions that
elites have made. But even the control capacities of autocratic regimes are limited so
that they have somehow to address what the citizenry wants and needs.
Empirical research has measured the levels of participation across nations and
highlighted distinctions between different modes of political action. Verba and his
colleagues (Verba, Nie, and Kim 1978; Verba, Schlozman, and Brady 1995) (p. 332)
demonstrated that different forms of action vary in their political implications, and in the
factors that stimulate individuals to act. This framework was extended to include the
growth of unconventional political action that occurred since the 1960s (Barnes et al.
1979). This framework of participation modes is the common foundation of participation
research.
For the past several years, the most intense debate has focused on whether the level of
political participation is systematically changing in Western democracies. As supporting
evidence, the long-standing “paradox of participation” has noted that turnout in the
United States has decreased since the 1960s, even though educational levels and the
affluence of the nation have dramatically increased (Brody 1978; Rosenstone and
Hansen 1993).
Putnam (2000) provocatively argued that declining turnout is part of a broader trend that
has us “bowling alone.” Putnam claimed that social engagement is dropping in
advanced industrial societies because of societal changes, such as changing labor
patterns among women, rising television usage, urban sprawl, and the decline of
traditional social institutions. These trends have supposedly led to a decline in social
capital—the skills and values that facilitate democratic participation—and thereby to
declines in the citizenry’s participation in politics.
The study of social capital and the changes in the patterns of participation in
contemporary democracies has been one of the most fertile areas of research for the
past decade. On the one side is clear cross-national evidence of declining turnout in
advanced industrial democracies (Blais 2000; Wattenberg 2002; Franklin 2004). Other
measures of partisan activity, such as party membership, also show clear downward
trends in most nations (Scarrow 2000). This might be part of a more general downturn
in civic engagement because church attendance, union membership, and the
engagement in several types of traditional voluntary associations are declining.
On the other side is a growing body of evidence that new forms of civic and political
action—such as contacting, direct action, contentious politics, self-help groups, local
initiatives, donations—are counterbalancing the decline in electoral participation and
other traditional forms of civic engagement (Zukin et al. 2006; Pattie, Seyd, and
Whiteley 2004; Cain, Dalton, and Scarrow 2003). In addition, social group membership
and the formation of social capital seem to be increasing in (p. 333) many advanced
industrial democracies, making the USA an atypical case (Stolle and Howard 2007;
Putnam 2002). Moreover, modernization processes are changing the ways in which
people interact and engage in the public sphere, transforming the character of social
capital instead of eliminating it altogether: Loyalist forms of eliteguided engagement go
down but spontaneous forms of self-driven engagement go up (Norris 2002; Van Deth,
Montero, and Westholm 2006).
This controversy touches the vitality of the democratic process. Decreasing involvement
in traditional social groups (such as unions and religious groups) and declining social
capital from these group affiliations are generally seen in established democracies, but
this might not indicate a general erosion of civic engagement and social capital. It might
simply reflect a transformation of the ways in which citizens relate to each other and
their communities (Skocpol 2003). The Internet and social networking sites are
connecting individuals in new ways, and new forms of face-to-face groups are also
developing. If one includes new forms of interaction and engagement, participation
levels and the various methods of political action are generally expanding in most
advanced industrial societies—even while participation in the traditional form of party
membership and electoral politics is decreasing. New forms of engagement expand
political participation beyond the boundaries of what it was conventionally viewed to be.
These tendencies reflect a great flexibility of democracies, allowing forms of
participation to adapt to changing societal conditions. The new style of citizen
participation places more control over political activity in the hands of the citizenry as
well as increasing public pressure on political elites.
However, the expanding repertoire of action also may raise potential problems. For
example, some forms of participation can increase inequalities in involvement, which
would bias the democratic process in ways that conflict with the ideal of “one (wo)man
one vote” (Verba, Schlozman, and Brady 1995; Cain, Dalton, and Scarrow 2003; Parry,
Moyser, and Day 1992). New forms of direct action are even more dependent on the
skills and resources represented by social status, and thus may increase the
participation gap between lower-status groups and higher-status individuals. These new
forms of action also create new challenges for aggregating diverse political demands
into coherent government policy. Ironically, overall increases in political involvement
may mask a growing socialstatus bias in citizen participation and influence, which runs
counter to democratic ideals.
The challenge for established democracies is to expand further the opportunities for
citizens to participate and meaningfully influence the decisions affecting their lives. To
meet this challenge means ensuring an equality of political rights and opportunities that
will be even more difficult to guarantee with a wider variety of activities. However, a
socially biased use of expanded political opportunities should not blame the
opportunities but should blame the policies that fail to alleviate the social bias, such as
unequal access to education and other social benefits that influence the citizens’
resources to participate.
Election turnout was often fairly high in the immediate post-transition elections in
Eastern Europe, but has subsequently declined in most nations. Similarly, party activity
has atrophied as democratic institutions have developed (Barnes and Simon 1998; van
Biezen 2003). And while there was a popular lore claiming that a robust underground
civil society prompted the democratization trend in Eastern Europe, post-transition
research finds that social engagement is now limited (Howard 2003). Many East
Europeans protested during the democratic transitions of the late 1980s and early
1990s, but these forms of action diminished after the transition in a kind of “post-
honeymoon” effect (Inglehart and Catterberg 2003). Consequently, Eastern Europe still
faces the challenge of integrating citizens into democratic politics and nurturing an
understanding of the democratic process.
The desire to participate in the decisions affecting one’s life is common across the
globe, but political institutions can shape whether these desires are expressed and how
(Inglehart and Welzel 2005). Possessing the skills and resources to be politically active
is an equally important factor. Research is now identifying how these two forces
combine to shape the patterns of citizen action.
The first empirical study of representation was the famous Miller–Stokes study of
representation in America (Miller and Stokes 1963). This model and research approach
were soon expanded to a host of other advanced industrial democracies (Barnes 1977;
Converse and Pierce 1986; Thomassen 1994). This research examined one of the most
important questions in research on democracy, but the findings were limited. The
theoretical model developed in the United States did not seem to fit other democracies.
In addition, it is difficult to assemble the resources required to conduct parallel studies of
the citizenry. Thus, in the fifty years since the original Miller–Stokes study, their full
research project has not been replicated in the United States.
Other studies in the United States have examined elements of the representation
process; for instance, comparing the congruence between mass and elite opinions in
the aggregate or the dynamics of mass opinion change (Erikson, McKuen, and Stimson
2002; Stimson 2004). Cross-national studies in Europe similarly indicate that the parties
have not lost their capacity to represent their voters when judged in broad left–right
terms (Schmitt and Thomassen 1999; Katz and Wessels 1999). This is an important
measure of the working of the democratic process.
Researchers have also examined the congruence between public policy preferences
and the outcomes of government (Page and Shapiro 1992). Gradually, this research
has spread to other Western democracies, often adopted to national institutions or the
structure of representation (Wlezien 2004; Wlezien and Soroka 2007). One important
branch of this approach compares programmatic profiles of political parties and political
preferences of their followers (Klingemann et al. 1994; Budge et al. 2001; Klingemann
et al. 2006). In fact, based on a study comparing citizen spending preferences and
government spending across different policy domains in the United States, Britain, and
Canada, Stuart Soroka and Christopher Wlezien (2008) come to a simple but important
conclusion: “democracy works.”
We have recently experienced what are arguably the most significant political events of
the last half-century: the collapse of the Soviet Empire and the global democratization
wave of the 1990s. As advanced industrial societies are evolving into a new form of
democratic politics, we are witnessing the initial development of democracy in a new set
of nations. The democratization waves in Central and Eastern Europe, Asia, and Africa
touch at the very core of many of our most basic questions about the nature of citizen
politics and the working of the political process.
Normally we study democratic systems that are roughly at equilibrium and speculate on
how this equilibrium was created (or how it changes in minor ways). Moreover, during
the earlier waves of democratic transition the tools of empirical social science were not
available to study political behavior directly. The current democratization wave thus
provides a virtually unique opportunity to address questions on identity formation, the
creation of political cultures (and possibly how cultural inheritances are changed), the
establishment of an initial calculus of voting, and the dynamic processes linking political
norms and behavior. These questions represent some of the fundamental research
issues of our time. The answers will not only explain what has occurred during this
democratization wave, but may aid us in better understanding the basic principles of
how citizens function within the political process. There has never been a richer
opportunity to study the choices of citizens across regime forms and between old and
new democracies. The conditions to arrive at a theory of how citizens come to political
choices depending on different political settings, and how these choices affect the
settings, have never been better than they are today.
In each of the areas discussed in this chapter, research can be described in two terms.
First, our empirical knowledge has expanded almost exponentially over the past
generation. Until quite recently, a single national survey provided the basis for
discussing the characteristics of citizen behavior; and such evidence was frequently
limited to the larger advanced industrial democracies. Indeed, there were large parts of
the world where our understanding of the citizenry, their attitudes, and behavior were
based solely on the insights of political observers—which can be as fallible as the
observer. Contemporary comparative research is now more likely to draw on
crossnational and cross-temporal comparisons. Research has developed the
foundations for the scientific study of the topic.
Second, it is ironic that our expanding empirical evidence has occurred during a time
when many basic features of citizen attitudes and behaviors are changing (p. 337) in
ways that may limit the value of past theories and models. In part, these trends reflect
the tremendous social and political changes that have occurred in the world during the
past half-century. Modernization has transformed living conditions in most nations,
altered the skills and values of contemporary publics, and offered new technological
advances that change the relationship between citizens and elites. Perhaps, this is the
most interesting object worthy of study. For never before in history has the interaction
between elites and people been shifted so much to the side of the people.
The global wave of democratization in the 1990s has dramatically increased the role of
the citizenry in many of the new democracies in Central and Eastern Europe, Asia, Latin
America, and Africa. This latter development makes our task as scholars of the citizen
more relevant than ever before, but also more difficult. Even as our research skills and
empirical evidence have expanded, the phenomena we study have been evolving—
something that physicists and chemists do not have to deal with. These changes
produce uncertainty about what new styles of political decision-making, or what new
forms of political participation are developing. In addition, the nature of citizen politics is
becoming more complex—or through our research we are now realizing that greater
complexity exists. This produces a real irony: Even though we have greater scientific
knowledge, our ability to predict and explain political behavior may actually be
decreasing in some areas. For instance, we know much more about electoral behavior
than we did in the 1950s, but simple sociodemographic models that were successful in
predicting electoral behavior in the 1960s are much less potent in explaining
contemporary voting behavior. So we have gained greater certainty about the
uncertainty of voter decisions (Wren and McElwain, this volume).
Finally, we see broad outlines of what we think are some of the most productive areas
for future research. Several aspects of research design offer exciting potential for the
future. For instance, most studies use random surveys of individuals. This design
focuses our attention on individuals as autonomous political actors and theories
emphasizing the individualization of politics. However, people exist in a social,
economic, and political context that can shape their political behavior. For example,
limited political knowledge can be overcome by asking spouses, friends, or neighbors
(Gunther, Ramón Montero, and Puhle 2006). Even more important, characteristics of
the political context can alter the processes shaping citizen attitudes and behavior, such
as exposure to supportive or dissonant information (Huckfeldt et al. 2004; Mutz 2006).
Equally exciting are new research opportunities to study how the institutional structure
of a polity interacts with citizen behavior (e.g. Anderson et al. 2005; Klingemann 2009).
Thus, studying this complex of social and political interactions should yield new insights
into how political behavior is shaped.
An even more dramatic sign of the development of political behavior research is the
increasing complexity of research designs. Once, a single national sample was the
basis of extensive research because such evidence was still rare. However, as our
knowledge has increased and our theories have become more complex, this calls for
more complex research designs. Election studies, for instance, need to study individuals
in context, including multiple and converging data collections: social context, media
content, party actions, and other elements of the total process. Doing more of what we
did in the past—more questions, more surveys, larger sample sizes—is not likely to
generate the theoretical or empirical insights necessary to move the research field
forward. Complex theories and complex processes require more complex research
designs.
We also believe that research will engage a new set of theoretical issues as the field
moves forward. It is more difficult to outline briefly the forefront for research, because
theoretical questions are more diverse than the methodological innovations we have
just outlined. However, several areas of potential enquiry stand out for their potential.
While most research has focused on single nations, and typically Western democracies,
the global expansion of research means that issues of social modernization and cross-
national development are likely to be especially fruitful areas of study. This is a case
where we have been theory rich and information poor—and now these theories will be
tested, and undoubtedly new models developed in their place. Similarly, past theorizing
has focused on explaining systems and behavior in equilibrium. Theories of political
change seem an especially fruitful area for enquiry given the dynamic nature of
contemporary politics.
Finally, one should not forget that because of the sheer number of countries for which
survey data are available, we are for the first time able to study some of the basic
assumptions underlying all research into mass belief systems: That variation in these
belief systems has a true impact on a society’s level of democracy and the outputs of
government. Aggregate-level analysis of the correlates of democracy was usually left to
political economists who could more easily correlate socioeconomic indicators to levels
of democracy. But we can now test their models against political culture, examining
whether socioeconomic factors or features of political culture have a stronger impact on
democracy. As recent studies show (Inglehart and Welzel 2005), features of political
culture have as strong an impact on levels of democracy as socioeconomic factors.
Our goal has been to introduce the readers to the research literature and the research
questions that remain. We came away from this task with tremendous respect for what
has been achieved since the onset of modern comparative research. At the same time,
answering one question generates new questions, and cross-national research on
political behavior is just entering its age of discovery.
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