Uncoupling Conceptual Understandings and Political Preferences: A Study of Democratic Attitudes among Singapore's Highly Educated Young People

IF 1.4 4区 社会学 Q1 AREA STUDIES Pacific Affairs Pub Date : 2022-09-01 DOI:10.5509/2022953497
Norma Osterberg-Kaufmann, Kay Key Teo
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引用次数: 2

Abstract

Democracy is subject to constant and seemingly interminable contestation in academic and policy contexts, and yet, empirically and methodologically robust analysis of what the term means in practice for actual citizens has remained an area of relative lacuna. Admittedly, large-N surveys have attempted to address this research gap by examining attitudes to numerous components of democracy, but without the fine-grained detail required to overcome simply reproducing the focus on liberal procedural, Western precedent-based, top-down approaches to understanding such a complex and varied political system. This article proposes a methodological approach, based on the requirements of comparative political theory and research into how people view democracy. This allows us to explore political attitudes and the meaning of democracy with a bottom-up approach using the methods of repertory grid and in-depth interviews. Singapore is a particularly exciting case for comparative political science: although it has all the advantageous conditions that, according to classic modernization theory, promote the development of democracy, it is still not a democracy. To what extent will the conceptualization of democracy by citizens in a country like Singapore resemble theoretical definitions, and how suitable do they consider democracy to be for Singapore? What are their expectations for a good government or regime? This article examines what highly educated Singaporeans, ranging in age from their twenties to their forties, think about democracy. In doing so, the article also pursues the goal of comparing methods between repertory grid interviews and in-depth interviews in order to work out potential interfaces, and points of connection, between the two methods to allow for the most productive research outcomes. We find that, conceptually, these Singaporeans' perceptions of democracy appeared very similar to what is usually discussed as electoral democracy in established literature. When evaluating the performance of a government or a regime, however, liberal ideas of freedom and fairness competed with more pragmatic approaches that reflect the principles of progress and success as well as community and performance-focused orientations. As a result, our respondents did not prioritize democratic practices as much as other aspects of governance like e ciency. Our findings on the influence of state ideology on highly educated young people in Singapore strengthen the arguments of political myth as an integration and legitimization strategy in autocratic regimes and democratizing strong states or regimes with a particularly pronounced ideological hegemony.
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概念理解与政治偏好脱钩——新加坡高学历青年民主态度研究
民主在学术和政策背景下不断受到似乎无休止的争论,然而,从经验和方法上对这个词在实践中对实际公民意味着什么的有力分析仍然是一个相对空白的领域。诚然,大N调查试图通过调查对民主的许多组成部分的态度来解决这一研究差距,但没有所需的细粒度细节,只是简单地再现了对自由程序、西方先例、自上而下的方法的关注,以理解这样一个复杂多样的政治体系。本文提出了一种方法论方法,基于比较政治理论的要求,研究人们如何看待民主。这使我们能够使用剧目网格和深度访谈的方法,以自下而上的方式探索政治态度和民主的意义。新加坡是比较政治学的一个特别令人兴奋的例子:根据经典的现代化理论,尽管它拥有促进民主发展的所有有利条件,但它仍然不是一个民主国家。在新加坡这样的国家,公民对民主的概念化在多大程度上类似于理论定义,他们认为民主对新加坡有多合适?他们对一个好政府或政权的期望是什么?这篇文章探讨了年龄从20多岁到40多岁的受过高等教育的新加坡人对民主的看法。在这样做的过程中,本文还追求比较储备网格访谈和深度访谈之间的方法的目标,以找出这两种方法之间的潜在接口和联系点,从而获得最有成效的研究结果。我们发现,从概念上讲,这些新加坡人对民主的看法似乎与传统文献中通常讨论的选举民主非常相似。然而,在评估政府或政权的表现时,自由和公平的自由思想与反映进步和成功原则以及以社区和表现为重点的更务实的方法相竞争。因此,我们的受访者没有像效率等治理的其他方面那样优先考虑民主实践。我们关于国家意识形态对新加坡受过高等教育的年轻人的影响的研究结果,强化了政治神话作为专制政权中的一种整合和合法化策略,以及使强大的国家或意识形态霸权特别明显的政权民主化的论点。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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来源期刊
Pacific Affairs
Pacific Affairs AREA STUDIES-
CiteScore
1.60
自引率
12.50%
发文量
18
期刊介绍: Pacific Affairs has, over the years, celebrated and fostered a community of scholars and people active in the life of Asia and the Pacific. It has published scholarly articles of contemporary significance on Asia and the Pacific since 1928. Its initial incarnation from 1926 to 1928 was as a newsletter for the Institute of Pacific Relations (IPR), but since May 1928, it has been published continuously as a quarterly under the same name. The IPR was a collaborative organization established in 1925 by leaders from several YMCA branches in the Asia Pacific, to “study the conditions of the Pacific people with a view to the improvement of their mutual relations.”
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