Erik Bengtsson
Stf prefekt Ekonomisk-historiska institutionen, Universitetslektor
The Social Origins of Democracy and Authoritarianism Reconsidered: Prussia and Sweden in Comparison
Författare
Summary, in Swedish
In a large social science literature, unequal rural class structures (“landlordism”) are associated with authoritarian political outcomes. This paper revisits the debate focusing on the electoral consequences of land inequality in Prussia, the locus classicus of the pernicious effects of landlordism, and Sweden, often perceived as Prussia’s opposite, with a farmer-dominated social structure and stable democratization. Investigating the late 19th and early 20th century, we show that agrarian inequality was higher in Sweden than in Prussia, already putting the theory of a landlordism-authoritarianism connection in question. In contrast to the existing hypothesis, our within country-analysis indicates no positive correlation between land inequality and electoral support for the Conservative and Nazi parties and a positive correlation with turnout. We discuss social mobilization and declining social control of the landed elites as mediating institutional factors.
Avdelning/ar
- Ekonomisk-historiska institutionen
- Tillväxt, teknologisk förändring och ojämlikhet
Publiceringsår
2024-11
Språk
Engelska
Dokumenttyp
Preprint
Förlag
OSF Preprints
Ämne
- Economic History
- Economics
- Political Science (excluding Public Administration Studies and Globalization Studies)
- History
Nyckelord
- Land inequality
- Democracy
- Sonderweg
- Conservative
- NSDAP
- Germany
- Sweden
Aktiv
Published
Projekt
- The Swedish transition to equality: income inequality with new micro data, 1862–1970