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@article{ Gerschewski2021,
 title = {Erosion or decay? Conceptualizing causes and mechanisms of democratic regression},
 author = {Gerschewski, Johannes},
 journal = {Democratization},
 number = {1},
 pages = {43-62},
 volume = {28},
 year = {2021},
 issn = {1743-890X},
 doi = {https://doi.org/10.1080/13510347.2020.1826935},
 abstract = {Democratic regression has become a worrying phenomenon in the last years. Social science has provided a variety of explanations why democratic regimes have lost democratic regime quality. Against this backdrop, I take stock of the recent literature by putting forward two important analytical distinctions that we should make more explicit. First, I propose to classify our current explanations along the source where the cause for the malaise originated. By doing so, I introduce a distinction between erosion and decay type of arguments. While the former is a gradual process that is caused exogenously - like wind or water hitting a stone - the latter is caused endogenously - like the half-life in nuclear decay processes. Second, I draw a distinction between the endogenous or exogenous roots of the cause and the subsequent causal mechanism that connects the cause with the outcome. I outline the need for dissecting a causal mechanism into its constitutive components and highlight its underlying dimensions of temporality. Throughout the article, I use empirical case material as well as relevant secondary literature to illustrate these points.},
 keywords = {Asien; Asia; politisches Regime; political regime; Demokratie; democracy; institutioneller Wandel; institutional change}}