Reanalysis: Are coups good for democracy?
Author(s) -
Miller Michael K.
Publication year - 2016
Publication title -
research and politics
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 2.232
H-Index - 20
ISSN - 2053-1680
DOI - 10.1177/2053168016681908
Subject(s) - democratization , autocracy , democracy , spell , regime change , political science , econometrics , political economy , development economics , positive economics , economics , sociology , politics , law , anthropology
Several recent studies find that coups in autocracy raise the ensuing likelihood of democratization. In a recent critique (“Are coups good for democracy?”), Derpanopoulos et al. dispute this link. This paper shows that their modeling approach, which includes fixed effects for each autocratic regime spell, suffers from severe bias. A reanalysis that applies similar models to the data without this bias recovers significant effects of coups and coup attempts on democratization, although only during the post-Cold War era.
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