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Modernization, Cultural Change, and Democracy
The Human Development Sequence
This book presents a revised version of modernisation theory.
Ronald Inglehart (Author), Christian Welzel (Author)
9780521846950, Cambridge University Press
Hardback, published 8 August 2005
344 pages, 57 b/w illus. 28 tables
24.2 x 15.9 x 2.3 cm, 0.61 kg
'The book is a major contribution to the research on value changes and democratisation and will be of much interest to both students and researchers who study human development and democratic change.' Political Studies Review
This book demonstrates that people's basic values and beliefs are changing, in ways that affect their political, sexual, economic, and religious behaviour. These changes are roughly predictable: to a large extent, they can be interpreted on the basis of a revised version of modernisation theory presented here. Drawing on a massive body of evidence from societies containing 85 percent of the world's population, the authors demonstrate that modernisation is a process of human development, in which economic development gives rise to cultural changes that make individual autonomy, gender equality, and democracy increasingly likely. The authors present a model of social change that predicts how the value systems play a crucial role in the emergence and flourishing of democratic institutions - and that modernisation brings coherent cultural changes that are conducive to democratisation.
Part I. The Forces Shaping Value Change: 1. A revised theory of modernization
2. Value change and the persistence of cultural traditions
3. Exploring the unknown: predicting mass responses
4. Intergenerational value change
5. Value changes over time
6. Individualism, self-expression, and civic virtues
Part II. Consequences of Value Change: 7. The causal link between democratic values and democratic institutions: theoretical discussion
8. The causal link between democratic values and democratic institutions: empirical analyses
9. Social forces, collective action, and international events
10. Individual level values and system level democracy: the problem of cross-level analysis
11. Elements of a pro-democratic civic culture
12. Gender equality, emancipative values, and democracy
13. The Implications of human development
Conclusion: an emancipative theory of democracy.
Subject Areas: Political economy [KCP], Public opinion & polls [JPVK], Comparative politics [JPB]
