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Democratic Values in the Post-Communist Region: The Incidence of Traditionalists, Skeptics, Democrats, and Radicals

Martina Klicperova-Baker () and Jaroslav Kostal
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Martina Klicperova-Baker: Institute of Psychology, Czech Academy of Sciences
Jaroslav Kostal: Institute of Psychology, Czech Academy of Sciences

A chapter in Changing Values and Identities in the Post-Communist World, 2018, pp 27-51 from Springer

Abstract: Abstract A generation after the democratic revolutions of 1989, most post-communist countries remain democratic. However, citizens differ by their identification with democratic values and by the prevalence of five main “(non)democratic mentalities” which we derived from the European Values Study (EVS). Our focus was on three post-communist regions: (a) the post-soviet core countries (Russia, Moldova, Ukraine), (b) ex-soviet Baltics (Estonia, Latvia, Lithuania), and (c) Central European “Visegrad” countries (Czech Republic, Hungary, Poland, Slovakia). Results indicate that democrats (i.e., secular democrats and religious democrats) are represented in every country; their incidence is higher among elites and among the young; yet democrats in all post-communist countries constitute a minority. Intolerant traditionalists are most typical for the post-soviet core countries, while passive skeptics constitute majority in the post-communist Central Europe and plurality in the Baltics. Passive skepticism can be interpreted in terms of an enduring “post-communist syndrome.”

Keywords: Post-communism; Democracy; Skepticism; Traditionalism; Intolerance; Democrats; European Values Study; EVS; Post-communist syndrome (search for similar items in EconPapers)
Date: 2018
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Persistent link: https://EconPapers.repec.org/RePEc:spr:socchp:978-3-319-72616-8_2

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DOI: 10.1007/978-3-319-72616-8_2

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