lorenagbarberia.bsky.social
lorenagbarberia.bsky.social
lorenagbarberia.bsky.social
@lorenagbarberia.bsky.social
Associate Professor, Department of Political Science, University of São Paulo All views expressed are my own.
We started this paper before COVID-19, and it our work since this paper continues to try to understand responsibility attribution in the context of exogenous and endogenous shocks in Latin American democracies
June 27, 2025 at 2:05 PM
To use the DDRLA, here is the dataverse: dataverse.harvard.edu/dataset.xhtm...
dataverse.harvard.edu
March 9, 2025 at 3:39 PM
We also demonstrate the utility of the DDRLA by replicating studies recently published in the @ajpseditor.bsky.social. Our results show that studies conflate authoritarian and democratic regimes in their analyses of Latin America, and findings change with better measurement.
March 9, 2025 at 3:39 PM
The DDRLA also introduces a democratic transition variable (two-turnover transitional democracy). We show that whereas in only 53.5% of episodes did democracy endure after a single turnover, democracy endured in 21/24 of the two-turnover democratic transitions in Latin America.
March 9, 2025 at 3:39 PM