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      Regimes of the World (RoW): Opening New Avenues for the Comparative Study of Political Regimes

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      Politics and Governance
      Cogitatio

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          Abstract

          Classifying political regimes has never been more difficult. Most contemporary regimes hold <em>de-jure</em> multiparty elections with universal suffrage. In some countries, elections ensure that political rulers are—at least somewhat—accountable to the electorate whereas in others they are a mere window dressing exercise for authoritarian politics. Hence, regime types need to be distinguished based on the<em> de-facto</em> implementation of democratic institutions and processes. Using V-Dem data, we propose with Regimes of the World (RoW) such an operationalization of four important regime types—closed and electoral autocracies; electoral and liberal democracies—with vast coverage (almost all countries from 1900 to 2016). We also contribute a solution to a fundamental weakness of extant typologies: The unknown extent of misclassification due to uncertainty from measurement error. V-Dem’s measures of uncertainty (Bayesian highest posterior densities) allow us to be the first to provide a regime typology that distinguishes cases classified with a high degree of certainty from those with “upper” and “lower” bounds in each category. Finally, a comparison of disagreements with extant datasets (7%–12% of the country-years), demonstrates that the RoW classification is more conservative, classifying regimes with electoral manipulation and infringements of the political freedoms more frequently as electoral autocracies, suggesting that it better captures the opaqueness of contemporary autocracies.

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          Author and article information

          Journal
          Politics and Governance
          PaG
          Cogitatio
          2183-2463
          March 19 2018
          March 19 2018
          : 6
          : 1
          : 60
          Article
          10.17645/pag.v6i1.1214
          05366799-07c6-4155-8d9c-c8953889f5d1
          © 2018

          http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0

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