ECPR

Install the app

Install this application on your home screen for quick and easy access when you’re on the go.

Just tap Share then “Add to Home Screen”

ECPR

Install the app

Install this application on your home screen for quick and easy access when you’re on the go.

Just tap Share then “Add to Home Screen”

Measuring Citizen Support for Fundamentally Different Political Regimes

Comparative Politics
Methods
Quantitative
Political Regime
Public Opinion
Survey Research
Political Cultures
Marlene Mauk
GESIS Leibniz-Institute for the Social Sciences
Marlene Mauk
GESIS Leibniz-Institute for the Social Sciences

Abstract

Contemporary political-culture research has ventured beyond the analysis of citizens’ attitudes in democracies and is increasingly focusing on questions of political support in autocracies. While many of the tradition’s core concepts can easily travel to non-democratic contexts, the empirical analysis of political support for non-democratic regimes presents researchers with a major problem: measurement. How can we assess political support in regimes that are fundamentally different from democracies in both their institutional designs and their functional logics? Currently, research on autocracies simply uses the same survey items that have been used to measure political support in democracies, most commonly questions gauging trust in different institutions. However, given the diverse institutional make-ups of autocracies, we must ask whether this approach is really feasible. To shed light on this question, the contribution sets out to test the comparability of the popular institutional-trust measure across democracies and autocracies. It makes use of a broad range of survey data (Afrobarometer, AmericasBarometer, Arab Barometer, Asian Barometer, Latinobarómetro, World Values Survey) and uses multi-level, multi-group confirmatory factor analysis techniques to test for various forms of measurement invariance.