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Limitations of democratic rights during the Covid-19 pandemic - exploring the citizens’ perception and discussions on dangers to democracy in Germany
[journal article]
Abstract The governments' mitigation measures to fight the COVID-19 pandemic are unprecedented in our post-war history. For overcoming this crisis, citizens were expected to act in compliance with these measures in order to control the spread of the virus and keep public health systems functional. This call ... view more
The governments' mitigation measures to fight the COVID-19 pandemic are unprecedented in our post-war history. For overcoming this crisis, citizens were expected to act in compliance with these measures in order to control the spread of the virus and keep public health systems functional. This call for protecting the public health at the same time confronted citizens with several and severe limitations of their democratic freedoms and rights: confinement, restriction on freedoms of movement, religion, specific provisions for public protest and finally also limitations to the right of education by school closures. This paper analyzes how citizens perceive the threat the COVID-19 pandemic and especially the mitigation measures posed for democracy. We assume that pandemic waves and pandemic fatigue have an impact on the perception of threat. To see the overall societal picture, we exploit a large-scale archive of online discourse on Twitter out of which we extract democracy-related discourse with the same temporal and geospatial coverage for our investigation. From that data source, we apply computational methods to extract time series data reflecting aggregated opinions and their evolution over time concerned with the correlation of attitudes towards democracy. We them move deeper using a longitudinal panel survey we conducted in November/December 2020, March/April 2021, and July/August 2021. to have a view of the relationship between citizens’ socio-economic status and basic political attitudes. Our multi-method analysis bases on the German case and covers the period from December 2020 to August 2021.... view less
Keywords
health policy; contagious disease; public health; public opinion; democracy; political attitude; fundamental right; rights of personal liberty; Federal Republic of Germany
Classification
Political Process, Elections, Political Sociology, Political Culture
Free Keywords
COVID-19; Corona pandemic; Democratic rights; Studies in Human Society; Twitter; Panel Survey
Document language
English
Publication Year
2023
Page/Pages
p. 635-661
Journal
Zeitschrift für Vergleichende Politikwissenschaft : German Journal of Comparative Politics, 16 (2023) 4
ISSN
1865-2654
Status
Published Version; peer reviewed