If you follow the Global Integrity blog, then there's a good chance you have an
interest in how to measure fuzzy concepts such as governance and
corruption; it's an issue Global Integrity tracks closely. If so, then
you should read Gerardo L. Munck's recently published Measuring Democracy. It's a hard-hitting critique of the conventional wisdom (and widely used data) used to measure democracy.
In
Gerry's slim but powerful volume, he takes up many of the same
questions we've been wrestling with in the context of "democracy" and
democracy-promotion. Can we measure "democracy"? And if we can, what
are best practices to guide such a measurement exercise?
The book is Measuring Democracy: A Bridge Between Scholarship and Politics
(Johns Hopkins University Press, 2009). We should disclose that we've
worked with Gerry in the past and think highly of his work.
In Measuring Democracy,
the author promotes a series of simple yet powerful best practices that
should be the basis for any scholarly or practitioner-based assessment
of democracy at the country level. Those best practices focus around a
framework (developed with Jay Verkuilen) that emphasize three key
attributes of any measurement tool or resultant data:
None of this is rocket science, but Measuring Democracy
lays bare just how many of the most widely used democracy data are
either poorly constructed and/or misused. It saves its most strident
critiques for Freedom House's Freedom in the World
data. Whether attacking Freedom House for its opaque and ill-designed
aggregation methodology ("In short, the numerous conceptual and
measurement problems that weaken the Freedom House indices are
compounded by the blatant disregard of the challenge of aggregation."),
or what Munck sees as the organization's simplistic conceptual approach
to measuring democracy ("Freedom House includes so many attributes...and
does so with such little thought about the relationships among such
attributes...that it is hardly surprising that a large number of distinct
or at least vaguely related aspects of democracy are lumped
together."), Measuring Democracy
pulls no punches. As I read the book, I couldn't help but compare
Munck's take-down of Freedom House to the deconstruction of the World Bank Institute's Worldwide Governance Indicators offered in 2006 by Ardnt and Oman in their (also recommended) Uses and Abuses of Governance Indicators. Ouch.
Why do these issues of measurement matter?
As Munck succinctly puts its:Although
this measurement movement is resulting in more and better data on
politics, the limitations of current knowledge should be acknowledged.
Such an acknowledgment is particularly critical because data on
politics are increasingly used in the world of politics. NGOs use data
for purposes of advocacy; a variety of actors regularly invoke
statistical analyses on the causes and consequences of democracy to
justify their support of, or opposition to, different policies; and
governments, [intergovernmental organizations], and the [multilateral
development banks] link data on politics to policy choices and
governance-related conditionalities. Moreover, such an acknowledgment
is key because information presented in quantitative form is generally
accorded a special status. After all, one of the selling points of
using data on politics is that they draw on the power of an association
with science and hence are treated with considerable deference by
public officials and the public. Yet this assumed scientific status
verges on being a misrepresentation if the current state of knowledge
regarding the measurement of political concepts.
Here's a
real-life example: if you subscribe to Munck's critique of the Freedom
House data and Arndt and Oman's critique of the WGI, then seven of the seventeen indicators used by the U.S. Millennium Challenge Corporation
to make decisions on which countries to give large aid packages to are
essentially bunk. This presents a bit of a challenge for an aid
organization that defines itself by relying on third-party data for
ostensibly objective and apolitical decision-making, noting that,
"Before a country can become eligible to receive assistance, MCC looks
at their performance on independent and transparent policy indicators."
Houston, we have a problem.
You can grab a copy of Measuring Corruption on Amazon.com.
While you're shopping, check out Global Integrity's A Users' Guide to Measuring Corruption, which looks at issues specific to measuring corruption and governance.
-- by Nathaniel Heller for the Global Integrity Commons
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Measuring Democracy: As Complicated As It Sounds
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