01632pab a2200181 454500008004000000100002500040245009100065260000900156300001300165362000800178520106300186650001401249700002201263773003401285909001001319999001701329952010401346180718b1998 xxu||||| |||| 00| 0 eng d aGasiorowski, Mark J. aThe structural determinants of democratic consolidation: evidence from the Third World c1998 ap.740-71 aDec aDemocratic consolidation is the process by which a newly established democratic regime becomes sufficiently durable that a return to non democratic rule is no longer likely. The authors examine a wide range of structural factors that may affect democratic consolidation in Third World countries, using three indicators of consolidation and multivariate statistical techniques. The authors' main finding is that development-related socio-economic factors, the contagion effect of democratic neighbors, and high inflation each strongly affect the likelihood of consolidation, although the latter was significant only in the early part of the period studied. Several other factors have no apparent effect, including several measures dealing with political culture and the design of democratic institutions. These three factors together strongly predict which Third World democracies achieve consolidation, suggesting that the process-centric literature on democratic consolidation has paid inadequate attention to the effects of structural factors. - Reproduced aDemocracy aPower, Timothy J. aComparative Political Studies a40674 c40674d40674 00104070aIIPAbIIPAd2018-07-19hVolume no: 31, Issue no: 6pAR41049r2018-07-19w2018-07-19yAR