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Oct. 25, 2017 news
Nine researchers involved in the Varieties of Democracy (V-Dem) project gathered in Rome, Italy from across the Americas and Europe on October 17–19 to present their latest findings at the conference ”What Do We Know About Democratization After 117 Years?”.
Held at the University of Notre Dame’s Rome Global Gateway, the conference gave the democratization researchers the opportunity to discuss the project’s ongoing research agenda and to plan the second volume of a series of books on the V-Dem project.
"It was a rare privilege to be in the company of such brilliant minds, with unbounded time to thoroughly debate how to retest all the major beliefs about democratization,” said Prof. Michael Coppedge, Notre Dame University. “I came away convinced that this book will establish a fundamentally new framework for understanding the centrally important political process of democratization."
The first book in the V-Dem series, Varieties of Democracy: Measuring a Century of Political Change (Cambridge University Press, forthcoming 2018) tells the story of how V-Dem’s international collaboration came together and gives an overview of the project’s goals and accomplishments.
The second book will offer a comprehensive explanation of democratization around the world. With its unique approach to the measurement of democracy and unparalleled precision of data, V-Dem can provide insights about the development of key democratic trends as well as address over 60 years of scholarly debates over which factors contribute to, or prevent, democratization.
“V-Dem data makes it possible to conduct groundbreaking new research on topics such as democratization and development that previously was not possible,” said Prof. Staffan I. Lindberg, Director of the V-Dem Institute at University of Gothenburg. “That’s why we decided to write a second V-Dem book.”
Speakers at the conference included 9 members of the V-Dem team from American, European, and Latin American universities:
The conference was supported by grants from the Kellogg Institute for International Studies, University of Notre Dame; University of Gothenburg; Knut och Alice Wallenbergs Stiftelse; and Stiftelse Riksbankens Jubileumsfond.