Now available: Lorch & Mauk: Civil society, public support, and democratic recession in India, Indonesia, and the Philippines.


Categories: GESIS-News

Lorch, J., & Mauk, M. (2025). Civil society, public support, and democratic recession in India, Indonesia, and the Philippines. Democratization, 1–29.
https://doi.org/10.1080/13510347.2025.2464902

Civil society is generally considered as crucial for the development and stability of democracy. Specifically, based on social capital theory, many works assume that civil society organizations (CSOs) strengthen democracy by fostering public support for democratic institutions. Contrariwise, research on civil society’s “dark sides” argues that CSOs are not necessarily democratic. Investigating India, Indonesia, and the Philippines, which have undergone democratic recession, the authors approach the complex inter-relations between civil society, social capital, public support for democracy, and democratic resilience. To do so, they conduct a trend analysis, using diverse quantitative data sources, and interpret the results based on qualitative insights from area studies.