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Impact of Political Socialization on the Support for Democratic Principles: Emerging Research and Opportunities

Impact of Political Socialization on the Support for Democratic Principles: Emerging Research and Opportunities
Author(s)/Editor(s): Allison Clark Ellis (University of South Carolina Upstate, USA)
Copyright: ©2021
DOI: 10.4018/978-1-7998-4291-0
ISBN13: 9781799842910
ISBN10: 1799842916
EISBN13: 9781799842927

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Description

As we come upon the 30th anniversary of communism’s fall, it is a good time to reexamine what life was like behind the Iron Curtain and how communism impacted people for generations. The study of communication is important as it shows how much effect government type has on the principles its people support. Those interested in promoting and maintaining democratic ideals in countries around the world require a book such as this to better understand the effect communism has had.

Impact of Political Socialization on the Support for Democratic Principles: Emerging Research and Opportunities examines life under communism in Czechoslovakia and Hungary with particular attention paid to education, religion, travel, and exposure to Western culture, as well as their transition to democracy and how successful that transition has been. The book makes the case that being politically socialized under communism has made embracing democratic principles more difficult. The evidence for this case is based on 200 interviews conducted in 2017-18 with people who lived in Czechoslovakia and Hungary during communism, present-day analysis of government and politics in the Czech Republic and Hungary, and survey data from the European Social Survey. The main struggles in transitioning to democracy are identified, and it is speculated whether the Czech Republic and Hungary can ever be long-term, fully functioning democracies. The main implications of this publication are how government type during political socialization affects support for democratic principles, and whether the United States could ever be at risk for democratic erosion. The book is intended for political scientists, government officials, historians, academicians, researchers, and students.



Author's/Editor's Biography

Allison Ellis

Allison Clark Ellis is a professor of political science at the University of South Carolina Upstate. She received her Ph.D. in political science from the University of Florida in 2007 and specializes in American politics. At Upstate, Dr. Ellis teaches classes on political behavior, campaigns and elections, the media and politics, Congress, and the presidency. Dr. Ellis was a Fulbright Scholar to Hungary in 2016. She resides in Spartanburg, South Carolina with her husband Zach, two children Jackson and Ali Claire Pingley, and two cats Lyla and Tebow.



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