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A Loyal Base: Support for Authoritarian Regimes in Times of Crisis
[journal article]
Abstract Does citizen belief in the non-instrumental principles of the political regime, such as strongman leadership, patriotism, or attachment to a charismatic leader, collectively known as normative support, help stabilize authoritarian regimes? While a large literature recognizes that authoritarian regim... view more
Does citizen belief in the non-instrumental principles of the political regime, such as strongman leadership, patriotism, or attachment to a charismatic leader, collectively known as normative support, help stabilize authoritarian regimes? While a large literature recognizes that authoritarian regimes depend on popular support to lower the costs of staying in power, existing research mainly views mass support for these regimes as instrumental, fuelled by performance. Using novel experimental evidence from two original online surveys fielded in Turkey and observational data, we find high levels of normative support for Turkey's authoritarian rule. Further, our results demonstrate that instrumental and normative dimensions of support may be more closely related than previously theorized. Importantly, we show that both forms of support prevent voter defections in times of crisis. These findings, which revisit the importance of citizens' support for regime resilience, have implications for research on mass opinion and defection cascades in electoral autocracies.... view less
Keywords
Turkey; authoritarian system; Great Depression; public opinion; voting behavior
Classification
Political Process, Elections, Political Sociology, Political Culture
Political System, Constitution, Government
Free Keywords
survey experiments
Document language
English
Publication Year
2024
Journal
Comparative political studies (2024) OnlineFirst
ISSN
1552-3829
Status
Published Version; peer reviewed