COVID-19 and democracy: a scoping review

被引:7
作者
Sorsa, Ville-Pekka [1 ]
Kivikoski, Katja [1 ]
机构
[1] Univ Helsinki, Fac Social Sci, POB 18, FI-00014 Helsinki, Finland
关键词
COVID-19; Democracy; Resilience; Scoping review; EMERGENCY POWERS; CRISIS; RESPONSES; TIME; POLITICS; EUROPE; HEALTH; IMPACT; RIGHTS;
D O I
10.1186/s12889-023-16172-y
中图分类号
R1 [预防医学、卫生学];
学科分类号
1004 ; 120402 ;
摘要
Background The resilience of democracy is tested under exogenous shocks such as crises. The COVID-19 pandemic has recently tested the resilience of democratic institutions and practices around the world. Aim The purpose of this article is to scope the early research literature that discusses democracy and the COVID-19 pandemic. We review scientific journal articles published during the first two years of the pandemic. We ask three research questions in scoping this body of literature: (1) what are the key topic areas of all published research that associates itself with both democracy and COVID-19, (2) what kinds of conceptual and theoretical contributions has research literature that more specifically discusses democracy under the pandemic produced, and (3) what are the impacts of democracy to the pandemic and vice versa according to empirical research? Methods The scoping review methodology draws on systematic literature search strategies, computational methods, and manual coding. The systematic Web of Science search produced 586 articles for which we conducted a Correlated Topic Model. After technical and manual screening, we identified 94 journal articles that were manually coded. Results The early research on democracy and the COVID-19 pandemic offers a versatile body of scholarship. The topic modeling shows that the scholarship discusses issues of crises, governance, rights, society, epidemiology, politics, electorate, technology, and media. The body of papers with conceptual and theoretical contributions has offered new insights on the difficulties, possibilities, and means to maintain democracy under a pandemic. Empirical research on democracy's impact on the COVID-19 pandemic and vice versa varies in terms of methodology, geographical scope, and scientific contributions according to the direction of influence studied. Democracy appears to have a significant impact on some aspects of policy responses and epidemiological characteristics of the pandemic. In most parts of the world, the scope, franchise, and authenticity of democracy narrowed down due to the pandemic, albeit in most cases only temporarily. Conclusions A significant number of papers show that the pandemic has accentuated democratic backsliding but is unlikely to have undermined established democracies that have proved resilient in face of the pandemic. But empirical research has also made visible some weak signals of antidemocratic tendencies that may become more accentuated in the longer run.
引用
收藏
页数:21
相关论文
共 120 条
  • [41] The comparative politics of COVID-19: The need to understand government responses
    Greer, Scott L.
    King, Elizabeth J.
    da Fonseca, Elize Massard
    Peralta-Santos, Andre
    [J]. GLOBAL PUBLIC HEALTH, 2020, 15 (09) : 1413 - 1416
  • [42] Surveillance, Security, and Liberal Democracy in the Post-COVID World
    Greitens, Sheena Chestnut
    [J]. INTERNATIONAL ORGANIZATION, 2020, 74 : E169 - E190
  • [43] COVID-19, The Rule of Law and Democracy. Analysis of Legal Responses to a Global Health Crisis
    Grogan, Joelle
    [J]. HAGUE JOURNAL ON THE RULE OF LAW, 2022, 14 (2-3) : 349 - 369
  • [44] Democratic Erosion and Democratic Resilience in Central Europe during COVID-19
    Guasti, Petra
    [J]. MEZINARODNI VZTAHY-CZECH JOURNAL OF INTERNATIONAL RELATIONS, 2021, 56 (04): : 91 - 104
  • [45] The Impact of the COVID-19 Pandemic in Central and Eastern Europe The Rise of Autocracy and Democratic Resilience
    Guasti, Petra
    [J]. DEMOCRATIC THEORY-AN INTERDISCIPLINARY JOURNAL, 2020, 7 (02): : 47 - 60
  • [46] Rethinking Democratic Theories of Justice in the Economy after COVID-19
    Haagh, Louise
    [J]. DEMOCRATIC THEORY-AN INTERDISCIPLINARY JOURNAL, 2020, 7 (02): : 110 - 123
  • [47] The biopolitical president?: Sovereign power and democratic erosion in El Salvador
    Hallock, Jeffrey T.
    Call, Charles T.
    [J]. DEMOCRATIZATION, 2021, 28 (08) : 1583 - 1601
  • [48] State of the world 2020: autocratization turns viral
    Hellmeier, Sebastian
    Cole, Rowan
    Grahn, Sandra
    Kolvani, Palina
    Lachapelle, Jean
    Luhrmann, Anna
    Maerz, Seraphine F.
    Pillai, Shreeya
    Lindberg, Staffan I.
    [J]. DEMOCRATIZATION, 2021, 28 (06) : 1053 - 1074
  • [49] How well does 'resilience' apply to democracy? A systematic review
    Holloway, Josh
    Manwaring, Rob
    [J]. CONTEMPORARY POLITICS, 2023, 29 (01) : 68 - 92
  • [50] A whole-of-nation approach to COVID-19: Taiwan's National Epidemic Prevention Team
    Hsieh, Chih-Wei
    Wang, Mao
    Wong, Natalie W. M.
    Ho, Lawrence Ka-ki
    [J]. INTERNATIONAL POLITICAL SCIENCE REVIEW, 2021, 42 (03) : 300 - 315