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Karoline Wiesner is Professor of Complexity Sciences at the University of Potsdam. She obtained a PhD in physics from Uppsala University in 2004. Wiesner's research focuses on the use of information theory in the study of formation, maintenance and stability of complex systems. Current topics include philosophical and mathematical foundations of complexity, complexity in climate systems, stability of democracy. [1]
She is a collaborator at the V-Dem Institute.
Karoline Wiesner's website.
Professor of Complexity Science, University of Potsdam.
Abstract: "The multidimensional dataset provided by the Varieties of Democracy (V-Dem) project reflects the complexity of the concept of democracy. And yet, all standard democracy measures are one-dimensional indices. Through a statistics-based approach, we identify two so-far hidden dimensions in the dataset. The first dimension aligns well with the V-Dem index of Electoral Democracy but the second dimension represents the so-far overlooked trade-off between electoral control and citizen freedom, which clearly distinguishes electoral autocracies from countries in which citizens are free but which struggle with corruption and violence. We interpret this second dimension as capturing a crucial element of stability for non-democracies. Using this second dimension relative to the first, we clarify long-standing debates on ‘waves of democracy’ and open up new avenues in understanding the recent phenomenon of ‘backsliding’ among consolidated democracies."