Subjective Measures of Liberal Democracy
- 1 February 2000
- journal article
- research article
- Published by SAGE Publications in Comparative Political Studies
- Vol. 33 (1) , 58-86
- https://doi.org/10.1177/0010414000033001003
Abstract
Using democracy in empirical work requires accurate measurement. Yet, most policy and academic research presupposes the accuracy of available measures. This article explores judge-specific measurement errors in cross-national indicators of liberal democracy. The authors evaluate the magnitude of these errors in widely used measures of democracy and determine whether their results replicate during a 17-year period (1972 to 1988). Then, they examine the nature of these systematic errors, hypothesizing that three different processes—(a) the information available for rating, (b) the judges' processing of this information, and (c) the method by which a judge's processing decisions are translated into a rating—could create error. The authors find that for the 17-year period from 1972 to 1988, there is unambiguous evidence of judge-specific measurement errors, which are related to traits of the countries. In the conclusion, the authors discuss the implications for democracy research and for other subjective measures.This publication has 31 references indexed in Scilit:
- Detection and Determinants of Bias in Subjective MeasuresAmerican Sociological Review, 1998
- Comparative Democracy: The Economic Development ThesisAmerican Political Science Review, 1994
- Liberal Democracy: Validity and Method Factors in Cross-National MeasuresAmerican Journal of Political Science, 1993
- Macrocomparative Research MethodsAnnual Review of Sociology, 1993
- War and the Fate of Regimes: A Comparative AnalysisAmerican Political Science Review, 1992
- Democracy and Economic Development: Modernization Theory RevisitedComparative Politics, 1988
- Political Rights and Political Liberties in Nations: An Evaluation of Human Rights Measures, 1950 to 1984Human Rights Quarterly, 1986
- Motivational biases in the attribution of responsibility for an accident: A meta-analysis of the defensive-attribution hypothesis.Psychological Bulletin, 1981
- Significance tests and goodness of fit in the analysis of covariance structures.Psychological Bulletin, 1980
- Issues in the Comparative Measurement of Political DemocracyAmerican Sociological Review, 1980