Abstract

Many countries around the world embrace freedom and democracy as part of their political culture. However, culture is at least in part a human response to the ecological challenges that a society faces; hence, it should not be surprising that the degree to which societies regulate the level of individual freedom is related to environmental circumstances. Previous research suggests that levels of societal freedom across countries are systematically related to three types of ecological threats: prevalence of pathogens, climate challenges, and natural disaster threat. Though their incidence overlaps, the literature has not yet provided a competitive test. Drawing upon the ecocultural framework, we tested five rival hypotheses, alternately focused on the above ecological factors and their interactions with economic wealth in explaining country variations in socio-political freedom. Focusing on data from 150 countries, we performed a series of linear mixed-effects regressions predicting freedom in the domains of politics, media, and economy. We found that countries with higher pathogen prevalence were more likely to suppress democracy and media freedom. Economic wealth, however, moderated the effect of pathogen prevalence on economic freedom, with the main effect being only found among wealthy countries, but not among poor countries. In contrast, natural disaster threat predicted political freedom and press freedom only among poor countries, consistent with the idea that disaster threat accompanied by poor resources promote socio-political freedom as a means of increasing collective survival. Throughout our analyses, we found no support for hypotheses based on climatic challenges. In addition, our multilevel approach revealed that country scores for socio-political freedom were highly clustered within world regions, accounting for substantial portions of variance. Overall, the present research offers a nuanced view of the interplay between ecology and wealth in the emergence of socio-political freedom. We discuss new directions in future research considering methodological and theoretical contributions of the present findings.

Highlights

  • Freedom is a central tenet of democracy

  • The dependent variables were selected during years after 2009 to ensure causal implications

  • Significant reductions of Akaike’s Information Criteria (AIC) as well as Schwarz’s Bayesian Information Criteria (BIC) indicated that adding a random intercept to the intercept-only model significantly improved the model fit for each socio-political freedom

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Summary

Introduction

Freedom is a central tenet of democracy. We explore this question and the broader conditions of when and where freedom takes a hold within socio-political structures from the ecocultural framework (Berry, 2002). Research from various disciplines of the social sciences have proposed theories to explain systematic country-variations in cultural systems and social structures. An emerging body of research suggests that ecological conditions might be antecedents to the level of societal freedom. Previous research in the ecocultural framework has shown that three ecological conditions—pathogens, climate, and natural disasters—appear to affect the levels of socio-political freedom. A major goal of this study was to provide a competitive test of existing hypotheses concerning contemporary cross-country variations in the levels of socio-political freedom

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