000 01533pab a2200157 454500
008 180718b2002 xxu||||| |||| 00| 0 eng d
100 _aAlexander, Gerard
245 _aInstitutionalized uncertainty, the rule of law, and the sources of democratic stability
260 _c2002
300 _ap.1145-170.
362 _aDec
520 _aThe third wave of democratization has been accompanied by two innovative theoretical claims that procedural regime attributes have systematic consequences for substantive outcomes under democracy and authoritarianism. Many "rule of law" claims associate democracy with lower risks and greater predictability over outcomes that authoritarianism. The "institutionalized uncertainty" claim expects nearly the opposite pattern. Each has important implications for regime support and thus for regime (in) stability. This article argues that neither approach effectively captures global patterns of risk and predictability. A reconsideration shows that both approaches mischaracterize both regime types. Predictability shown to vary at least as much across as between the two regime types. This is the result of factors exogenous to procedures, such as structures of political, social, and economic conflict. As a result, these structural conditions, rather than regime features alone, explain outcomes such as democratic instability and consolidation. Evidence suggests this is the case. - Reproduced.
650 _aRule of law
773 _aComparative Political Studies
909 _a54937
999 _c54937
_d54937