Periodic Reporting for period 3 - DEMED (Democracy under Threat: How Education can Save it)
Periodo di rendicontazione: 2023-09-01 al 2025-02-28
Here we briefly summarise the key work that we conducted so far.
Firstly, we made theoretical and empirical advances in understanding indoctrination to better understand the causes of democratisation and backsliding. We developed a new theoretical framework on indoctrination and published the draft as a working paper. Based on this theoretical work, we developed and conducted a global expert survey with our partner, the V-Dem Institute at the University of Gothenburg, to collect the Varieties of Indoctrination (V-Indoc) dataset, which includes innovative measures on education and media policies and practices. The data draws on the information provided by 760 country experts and offers unrivalled coverage of 160 countries from 1945-2021. To achieve the highest data quality and to recruit education experts for this data collection, we contacted over 24,000 scholars in this field and vetted more than 1,000 for their credentials. In complement to our original variables, we further harmonized over 200 additional variables on education, the media, and country background indicators from international organizations and academic projects to facilitate easy analysis of the data. The V-Indoc data set was publicly launched on February 28, 2023, and the online webinar was attended by 171 individuals from various disciplines, including political science, economics, sociology, and education.
Secondly, we have conducted multiple studies to understand how citizens think about democracy and autocracies and the factors that affect these core values that are central to democratic stability. 1) We have started work investigating whether regime indoctrination affects the level of democratic/authoritarian values. 2) We have contributed our resources of collecting survey data in multiple countries to a large consortium that develops new survey indicators to measure democratic support. 3) We ran two survey experiments (one in multiple countries and one in Spain) for two separate papers to understand the impact of authoritarian nostalgia on support for democracy, populism, and radical-right voting. 4) We conducted a survey experiment in Turkey to investigate how citizens living in autocracies structure support for this regime and how this support is affected by economic performance. And 5) in Dec 2022, we started fielding a conjoint experiment in over 30 countries to measure how people think about democracy and the potential trade-off they make with economic and social preferences.
Thirdly, DEMED researches the impact of adult civic education on strengthening citizens’ core values and political behaviour central to democracy. In the first step, we are conducting a systematic review and meta-analysis of the existing research in this field. Work on this commenced in the Autumn of 2020 and is still ongoing. In a second step, we developed five original civic educational online videos on the merits and functioning of democracy, which are experimentally tested using national samples recruited through social media. We piloted the videos and their impact on citizens' political attitudes and behaviour in Turkey in June 2022 and are currently in the process to roll out this experiment in more than 30 English- and Spanish-speaking countries from around the world. Based on the data, we are currently working on writing four different scientific articles. The first proof-of-concept study, which was conducted in Tunisia in 2019 and was finalised using DEMED resources was published in the highly-ranked American Journal of Political Science in January 2023.
A further achievement, which we would like to highlight, is the V-Indoc dataset, which we publicly released in February 2023. The V-Indoc data set aims to enable richer and more expansive empirical examinations of the causes and consequences of indoctrination around the world and over time. The data set should be particularly useful for advancing the understanding of how states use education as a political tool. Whereas existing comparative education data mostly measure the quantity of education, or code factual (de jure) information based on primary or secondary archival records, the V-Indoc data capture de facto education practices, covering diverse topics such as school curricula, teachers, and patriotism. This kind of data should allow researchers to directly examine the mechanisms that link education practices to outcomes of interest, which could not be previously tested explicitly due to the absence of requisite data. The data has been nominated for the 2023 Lijphart/Przeworksi/Verba Dataset Award, which is awarded annually by the American Political Science Association.