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Previous Military Rule and Democratic Survival

Authors
Kim, Nam Kyu
Issue Date
2월-2021
Publisher
SAGE PUBLICATIONS INC
Keywords
democracy; democratic survival; military rule; civil-military relations
Citation
JOURNAL OF CONFLICT RESOLUTION, v.65, no.2-3, pp.534 - 562
Indexed
SSCI
SCOPUS
Journal Title
JOURNAL OF CONFLICT RESOLUTION
Volume
65
Number
2-3
Start Page
534
End Page
562
URI
https://scholar.korea.ac.kr/handle/2021.sw.korea/49661
DOI
10.1177/0022002720957064
ISSN
0022-0027
Abstract
Existing scholarship shows that a history of military rule increases the risk of democratic breakdown. However, scholars overlook the fact that military rule takes two distinct forms: collegial and personalist military rule. I argue that the two types of military rule provide different structural settings for post-authoritarian contexts. Collegial military rule hands over more cohesive and hierarchical militaries to their subsequent democracies than personalist military rule. These militaries remain organized, politicized, and powerful in emerging democracies, which increases the risk of military intervention and coups. I hypothesize that collegial military rule poses a greater threat to the survival of the ensuing democracies than personalist military rule. Empirical analysis reveals that democracies after collegial military rule are more likely to collapse than other democracies, including those emerging from personalist military rule. This shows that the previous finding on the detrimental effect of military rule is largely driven by collegial military rule.
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