A red flag for public goods? The correlates of civil society restrictions

Governance Pub Date : 2024-08-17 DOI:10.1111/gove.12894
Hannah Smidt, Neil J. Mitchell, Kristin M. Bakke
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Abstract

Governments increasingly restrict civil society organizations (CSOs). Different theories converge on the expectation that CSOs are important for public goods. A largely unexplored implication is that increased restrictions on CSOs will signal the under‐delivery of public goods. Using data on government‐imposed restrictions on CSOs for a global sample of countries, we test this implication. Controlling for unobserved cross‐country heterogeneity, temporal shocks, and confounding variables, we find that the accumulation of restrictions on CSOs negatively correlate with public goods‐oriented government spending and positively correlate with corruption and clientelism in the future. Our evidence also suggests that the mechanism underpinning these findings is that persistent restrictions on CSOs negatively correlate with engaged society and, to some extent, protest. While global governance actors warn of the negative consequences of restrictions on CSOs, our analyses provide evidence that restrictions are indeed a red flag for governments' failure to live up to their public goods commitment.
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公共产品的红旗?公民社会限制的相关因素
各国政府越来越多地限制民间社会组织(CSO)。不同的理论都认为民间社会组织对公共产品非常重要。一个在很大程度上未被探讨的含义是,对民间组织限制的增加将预示着公共产品的交付不足。我们利用全球样本国家政府对民间组织施加限制的数据,对这一含义进行了检验。在控制了未观察到的跨国异质性、时间冲击和混杂变量后,我们发现对民间组织限制的累积与以公共产品为导向的政府支出呈负相关,与未来的腐败和贿赂呈正相关。我们的证据还表明,支持这些发现的机制是,对民间社会组织的持续限制与社会参与负相关,并在一定程度上与抗议负相关。虽然全球治理者对限制民间组织的负面影响提出了警告,但我们的分析提供的证据表明,限制民间组织确实是政府未能履行其公益承诺的一个信号。
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