Democratic Resilience in the Twenty-First Century: Search for an Analytical Framework and Explorative Analysis
Abstract
Introduction
Defining Democratic Resilience
the ability of a democratic system, its institutions, political actors, and citizens to prevent or react to external and internal challenges, stresses, and assaults through one or more of the three potential reactions: to withstand without changes, to adapt through internal changes, and to recover without losing the democratic character of its regime and its constitutive core institutions, organizations, and processes
Measuring Democratic Resilience
Measuring Democracy
Measuring Resilience Performance
Measuring Resilience Capacity
| Variables | Justification for inclusion | Indicators and data sources |
|---|---|---|
| Macro-institutional level | ||
| Democracy Stock | Political systems with more and stronger democratic experiences and legacies have a higher capacity to anticipate, adopt, resist or recover from the repercussions of external shocks or stress. | EDI (Coppedge et al., 2024); cumulative weighted sum of EDI values for all previous years. A conventional two and a half-percent annual depreciation rate (1- δ) was used. |
| Horizontal Accountability (V-Dem) | The more the executive is constrained by independent judiciary and effective legislative oversight, the stronger is horizontal accountability, which is an important resilient mechanism. In addition, the stronger the compliance with judiciary and the higher the court independence, the stronger the incentives for political and economic actors to keep and defend democracy. | Eight indicators from the Horizontal Accountability Index (High court independence, Lower court independence, Compliance with high court, Compliance with judiciary, Executive respects constitution, Executive oversight, Legislature investigates in practice, Legislature questions officials in practice). Higher scores indicate stronger constraints (Coppedge et al., 2024, 296ff.). |
| Political actors | ||
| Anti-pluralist Party Index (V-Party) | The more political parties are committed to pluralism and democratic processes, the better the ability of the party system to reduce political uncertainty and to provide more stable pro-democratic representation. | Democratic Party Index (Angiolillo et al., 2025; V-Dem; Coppedge et al., 2024); higher scores indicate more anti-pluralist party preferences in the party systems and thus lower resilience capacity. |
| Polarization (V-Dem) | The stronger political polarization, the more a society is divided into antagonistic political camps and the weaker is the resilience capacity of the political system. | Political polarization indicator (V-Dem; Coppedge et al., 2024); higher values indicate more polarization. |
| Political Violence (V-Dem) | The more political violence, the weaker is the resilience capacity of the political system. | Political violence indicator (V-Dem; Coppedge et al., 2024); higher values indicate more political violence. |
| Civic culture and civil society | ||
| Robustness of civil society | The more robust a civil society, the higher the capacity for vertical accountability, public consultation and consensus-building and critical support of the state by society. | Indicators from the core civil society index (v2xcs_ccsi) by V-Dem (CSO entry and exit; CSO repression; CSO participatory environment); higher scores indicate better resilience capacity (Coppedge et al., 2024). |
| Distribution of power resources | Wider distribution of relevant power resources make it easier for citizens to play a role in democratic politics which strengthens democratic resilience. | Indicators from the equal Access Index (power distributed by gender; power distributed by socioeconomic position; power distributed by social group), which measure the degree to which all groups “enjoy equal de facto capabilities to participate, to serve in positions of political power, to put issues on the agenda, and to influence policymaking” (Coppedge et al., 2024: 59). |
| Political community | ||
| Political trust in representative institutions | Higher levels of political trust in representative institutions induces less openness for anti-system alternatives and promote willingness of actors to overcome collective action problems and cooperate in the face of emerging or present risks to democratic systems. | Valgarðsson et al. (2025) latent estimates of trust in the government and trust in the parliament (Different surveys, such as ESS, WVS, EVS, LB, ISSP, etc.) based on latent variable approach by Claassen (2019). Higher values indicate more political trust and thus more resilience capacity. |
| Political trust in order institutions | Higher levels of political trust in order institutions induces less openness for anti-system alternatives and promote willingness of actors to overcome collective action problems and cooperate in the face of emerging or present risks to democratic systems. | Valgarðsson et al. (2025) latent estimates of trust in the police and legal order (Different surveys, such as ESS, WVS, EVS, LB, ISSP, etc.) based on latent variable approach by Claassen (2019). Higher values indicate more political trust and thus more resilience capacity. |
| Satisfaction with Democracy | Higher confidence in democracy induces less openness for anti-government/anti-system alternatives. | Claassen (2020) latent estimates of confidence in democracy (Different surveys, such as ESS, WVS, EVS, LB, ISSP, etc.). |
| Dimension | Indicator | Loading (Λ) | Uniqueness (Ψ) |
|---|---|---|---|
| Macro-institutional | Democratic stock | 0.76 | 0.418 |
| High court independence | 0.88 | 0.233 | |
| Lower court independence | 0.87 | 0.244 | |
| Compliance with high court | 0.87 | 0.246 | |
| Compliance with judiciary | 0.88 | 0.221 | |
| Executive respects constitution | 0.82 | 0.327 | |
| Executive oversight | 0.82 | 0.334 | |
| Legislature investigates in practice | 0.82 | 0.332 | |
| Legislature questions officials in practice | 0.70 | 0.527 | |
| Political actors | Polarization | 0.71 | 0.496 |
| Political Violence | 0.75 | 0.435 | |
| Anti-Pluralist-Party Index | 0.46 | 0.795 | |
| Civil society and civic culture | Power distributed by gender | 0.64 | 0.586 |
| Power distributed by socioeconomic position | 0.74 | 0.457 | |
| Power distributed by social group | 0.56 | 0.691 | |
| CSO entry and exit | 0.88 | 0.232 | |
| CSO participatory environment | 0.89 | 0.206 | |
| CSO repression | 0.74 | 0.445 | |
| Political community | Trust in representative institutions: parliament | 0.85 | 0.249 |
| Trust in representative institutions: government | 0.79 | 0.349 | |
| Trust in order institutions: police | 0.65 | 0.572 | |
| Trust in order institutions: legal system | 0.85 | 0.279 | |
| Satisfaction with Democracy | 0.63 | 0.605 |
Exploring Democratic Resilience in the Twenty-First Century
Descriptive Analysis
| Type | Number of episodes |
|---|---|
| Democratic breakdown | 12 |
| Democracies without breakdown | 2 |
| Regressed autocraciesa | 17 |
| Censored outcomes | 18 |
| Democratic turnaround | |
| J-shape turnaround | 7 |
| U-shape turnaround | 17 |
| L-shaped turnaround | 4 |
| Total | 77 |
| Episode outcome | Mean | SD | Min | Max | No. cases |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Democratic breakdown | 0.307 | 0.113 | 0.169 | 0.480 | 12 |
| No democratic breakdown | 0.345 | 0.023 | 0.329 | 0.362 | 2 |
| Outcome censored | 0.336 | 0.108 | 0.138 | 0.578 | 18 |
| Regressed autocracy | 0.203 | 0.094 | 0.089 | 0.480 | 17 |
| U-shaped turnaround | 0.258 | 0.070 | 0.126 | 0.374 | 17 |
| J-shaped turnaround | 0.237 | 0.078 | 0.134 | 0.346 | 7 |
| L-shaped turnaround | 0.309 | 0.102 | 0.209 | 0.451 | 4 |
Onset and Breakdown Resilience and Resilience Capacity
| Model 1 | Model 2 | Breakdown Onset | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Onset | First Stage | ||
| Intercept | −72.47 *** (15.79) | −37.833* (21.451) | 32.024 (27.879) |
| Democratic Resilience Capacity | −1.28 * (0.59) | −4.333*** (1.169) | −6.462*** (2.065) |
| GDP pc log | −0.20 (0.13) | 0.026 (0.045) | 0.029 (0.057) |
| GDP growth | 0.02 (0.04) | −0.062 (0.202) | −0.095 (0.21) |
| Population log | 0.08 * (0.04) | 0.067 (0.072) | −0.057 (0.086) |
| Regional democracy levels | 0.29 (1.66) | 0.386 (0.356) | 0.469 (0.424) |
| Western Europe and North America | −0.39 (0.47) | 0.409 (1.016) | 0.83 (1.351) |
| Subsaharan Africa | 0.18 (0.40) | 0.316 (0.562) | 0.655 (0.919) |
| Asia and Pacific | 0.51 (0.33) | 0.246 (0.702) | −3.478*** (0.718) |
| Eastern Europe and Central Asia | 0.25 (0.23) | 0.509 (0.516) | 1.277 (0.833) |
| MENA | 0.68 (0.74) | −1.574 (2.092) | −0.831 (3.255) |
| Year | 1.24 *** (0.29) | 0.644* (0.385) | −0.576 (0.503) |
| Year squared | −0.01 *** (0.00) | −0.003 (0.002) | 0.003 (0.002) |
| AIC | 373.86 | 1569.01 | |
| BIC | 443.98 | 1719.16 | |
| Log Likelihood | −173.93 | −757.5048 | |
| Num. obs. | 1626 | 1922 | 340 (27 breakdowns) |
Bounce-Back Resilience and Resilience Capacity
Conclusion
Acknowledgments
Declaration of Conflicting Interests
Funding
ORCID iD
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Data availability statement
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