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Constraining Is Enabling? Exploring the Influence of National Context on Civil Society Strength
Authors:Jelmer Kamstra  Ben Pelzer  Willem Elbers  Ruerd Ruben
Institution:1.Civil Society Division, Social Development Department,Ministery of Foreign Affairs,The Hague,The Netherlands;2.Department of Cultural Anthropology and Development Studies,Radboud University Nijmegen,Nijmegen,The Netherlands;3.Department of Sociology,Radboud University Nijmegen,Nijmegen,The Netherlands;4.African Studies Centre,Leiden University,Leiden,The Netherlands;5.LEI,University of Wageningen,Wageningen,The Netherlands
Abstract:This article analyses the influence of national context on civil society strength based on four key dimensions: level of democracy, political stability, rule of law and economic development. Whereas existing studies mainly focus on Western and post-communist countries, we explicitly include developing countries in our analysis. We use associational membership as proxy for civil society strength and include data of 53 countries. Rule of law, economic development and (to a lesser extent) political stability emerge from our multilevel regression models as the main factors affecting civil society membership. Unlike previous studies, we show that these relations are quadratic instead of linear. This means that where existing theories predict a drop in memberships in developing countries, we find a rise. In other words, harsh conditions actually strengthen civil society in terms of membership levels. We argue that this could be the case because reasons for CSO membership are essentially different in the developed and in the developing world. Contrary to theoretical assumptions, democratic rights do not appear critically important for civil society membership.
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