Item Details
Skip Navigation Links
   ActiveUsers:1503Hits:18286517Skip Navigation Links
Show My Basket
Contact Us
IDSA Web Site
Ask Us
Today's News
HelpExpand Help
Advanced search

In Basket
  Article   Article
 

ID140307
Title ProperIdentity competition in new democracies
Other Title Informationwhich identity wins in what conditions?
LanguageENG
AuthorChodhury, Zahid ul Arefin
Summary / Abstract (Note)Literature on the role of social cleavages in stabilising democratic politics shows that during the initial period of democratisation voters tend to get cues from their core identities, and thus vote along identity lines. As a result, in multicultural societies ethnic parties emerge to take part in elections. But the literature does not indicate how identities compete with each other. Particularly, which (source of) identity – among a possible range of identities such as ethnicity, language, race and religion – does a better job in stabilising democracies? This comparative study combines analyses of cross-country fractionalisation, political volatility and World Value Surveys data with case studies of four Muslim majority countries – Turkey, Pakistan, Nigeria and Bangladesh – to demonstrate that non-religious identities stabilise democracies during the initial period of democratisation, while the religious identity (Islam) gradually trumps others as the political system stabilises over time.
`In' analytical NoteBIISS Journal Vol. 36, No.1; Jan 2015: p.77-95
Journal SourceBIISS Journal 2015-03 36, 1
Key WordsDemocratic Stability ;  New Democracies