democratic backsliding
0 sources
Democratic backsliding is a phenomenon.
democratic backsliding
Summary
democratic backsliding is a phenomenon[1]. It ranks in the top 3% of phenomenon entities by monthly Wikipedia readership (877 views/month).[2]
Key Facts
- democratic backsliding's instance of is recorded as phenomenon[3].
- democratic backsliding's instance of is recorded as regime change[4].
- democratic backsliding's subclass of is recorded as decadence[5].
- democratic backsliding's part of is recorded as political science[6].
- democratic backsliding's opposite of is recorded as democratization[7].
- democratic backsliding's has part is recorded as democratic backsliding by country[8].
- democratic backsliding's has part is recorded as democratic backsliding in the United States[9].
- democratic backsliding's NL CR AUT ID is recorded as ph1129643[10].
- democratic backsliding's has contributing factor is recorded as income inequality[11].
- democratic backsliding's has contributing factor is recorded as cultural conservatism[12].
- democratic backsliding's has contributing factor is recorded as populism[13].
- democratic backsliding's has contributing factor is recorded as cult of personality[14].
- democratic backsliding's has contributing factor is recorded as Power politics[15].
- democratic backsliding's has effect is recorded as illiberal democracy[16].
- democratic backsliding's has effect is recorded as authoritarianism[17].
- democratic backsliding's studied by is recorded as political science[18].
- democratic backsliding's Google Knowledge Graph ID is recorded as /g/11g8v3kr82[19].
- democratic backsliding's significant person is recorded as Viktor Orbán[20].
- democratic backsliding's significant person is recorded as Kais Saied[21].
- democratic backsliding's significant person is recorded as Daniel Ortega[22].
- democratic backsliding's significant person is recorded as Hugo Chávez[23].
- democratic backsliding's has goal is recorded as autocracy[24].
- democratic backsliding's on focus list of Wikimedia project is recorded as WikiProject Human rights[25].
Why It Matters
democratic backsliding ranks in the top 3% of phenomenon entities by monthly Wikipedia readership (877 views/month).[2] It has Wikipedia articles in 19 language editions, a strong signal of global cultural recognition.[26] It is known by 37 alternative names across languages and contexts.[27]