Are established democracies in Europe at risk of breaking down? What is the role of political violence in these dynamics? And finally, what can political elites do to confront radical, anti-democratic forces? These questions are at the core of the “Democracy, Anger, and Elite Responses” (DANGER) project.
“Since around 2010, we have witnessed three troubling trends in European democracies”, says Nils-Christian Bormann, Professor of International Political Studies at Witten/Herdecke University and Principal Investigator of the DANGER project. “First, the rise of anti-democratic parties and movements in European democracies; second, an increase in political violence including the murder of members of parliaments (Mps) and journalists, as well as violence against ethnic minorities and riots against state institutions; and third, challenges to democratic norms and institutions in some European countries.”
European citizens and policy-makers face two important questions: How can you defend democracy? And how concerned should we be about political violence in bringing down democracy? Due to the lack of democratic crises in European democracies since the end of World War II, we are learning from democratic crises in Africa, Asia, or Latin America. “But are these the right comparison cases?”, asks Bormann.
The DANGER project investigates European democracies in the interwar period, many of which transitioned into dictatorships while experiencing intense episodes of political violence. The ultimate goal is to draw systematic lessons from cases that faced similar challenges to contemporary European democracies, including war, major economic crises, and wide-spread exclusive nationalism.
Specifically, the DANGER team is collecting two major data sets, one on political violence in European interwar democracies, and another on elite reactions to these events. Using quantitative and qualitative methods from political science, computer science, and history, the project will project the lessons from the past to contemporary European democracies.