Varieties of Democracy Dataset - Version 8 - Country-Year: V-Dem Core
Varieties of Democracy (V-Dem) is a new approach to conceptualizing and measuring democracy. We provide a multidimensional and disaggregated dataset that reflects the complexity of the concept of democracy as a system of rule that goes beyond the simple presence of elections. The V-Dem project distinguishes between five highlevel principles of democracy: electoral, liberal, participatory, deliberative, and egalitarian, and collects data to measure these principles.
V-Dem draws on theoretical and methodological expertise from its worldwide team to produce data in the most objective and reliable way possible. Approximately half of the indicators in the V-Dem dataset are based on factual information obtainable from official documents such as constitutions and government records. The other half consists of evaluative indicators on topics like political practices and compliance with de jure rules. On such issues, typically five experts provide ratings. V-Dem works closely with leading social science research methodologists and has developed a state of the art Bayesian Item Response Theory measurement model that, to the extent possible, minimizes coder error and addresses issues of comparability across countries and over time. V-Dem also draws on the team’s academic expertise to develop theoretically informed techniques for aggregating indicators into mid- and high-level indices. In this sense, V-Dem is at the cutting edge of developing new and improved methods of social science measurement.
Citation and access
Citation and access
Creator/Principal investigator(s):
- M. Steven Fish - University of California-Berkeley - Department of Political Science
- Adam Glynn - Emory University - Department of Political Science
- Joshua Krussel - University of Gothenburg
- Moa Olin - University of Gothenburg
- Josefine Pernes - University of Gothenburg
- Johannes von Römer - University of Gothenburg
- Brigitte Seim - University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill
- Rachel Sigman - Postgraduate Naval School
- Natalia Stepanova - University of Gothenburg
- Jeffrey Staton - Emory University - Department of Political Science
- Tore Wig - University of Oslo
- Daniel Ziblatt - Harvard University
Research principal:
Citation:
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Method and outcome
Method and outcome
Geographic coverage
Geographic coverage
Administrative information
Administrative information
Topic and keywords
Topic and keywords
Relations
Relations
Publications
Publications
Contact
Contact
Metadata
Metadata
Version 1
