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Resisting the Slide: Political Psychology of Democratic Resilience and Renewal

Democracy
Political Leadership
Political Psychology
P465
Tereza Capelos
University of Southampton

Abstract

This panel examines why some citizens and societies resist democratic erosion while others accept authoritarian alternatives. Bringing together normative, structural, and psychological perspectives, the papers explore how democratic commitment is shaped by inequality, procedural fairness, and leadership preferences. Together, they trace the fragile boundary between democratic loyalty and authoritarian temptation, showing how perceptions of exclusion, injustice, and crisis narratives can undermine — or sustain — democratic resilience.

Title Details
Nativism and Anti-Democratic Sentiment: An Inevitable Relationship? View Paper Details
Empowering Leaders or Trading-Off Democracy: Survey Experiment Investigating Citizens’ Support for Democratic Accountability Mechanisms View Paper Details
The (Un)Democratic Left Behind? The Procedural Preferences of Citizens Who Feel Unseen and Unheard View Paper Details