DOI: 10.1017/s1755048326100352 ISSN: 1755-0483

Comparative Shari‘a : measuring support for Islamism cross-nationally

Sam Dunham, C. Christine Fair, Rebecca Littman, Elizabeth Nugent, Michael Robbins

Abstract

Studies testing the relationship between preferences for Islamism and preferences for democracy in the Muslim world are inconclusive—and likely the result of measurement issues. Previously, we introduced a four-question battery measuring conceptions of Islamism and found that responses vary predictably across two components: whether respondents consider a shari‘a -based government to be one that provides services or one that imposes restrictive Islamic norms. Here, we demonstrate the consistency, generalizability, and utility of the battery through an analysis of 11,849 respondents in 11 Muslim countries. Defining a shari‘a -based government as one that provides is significantly and positively correlated with support for democracy, while defining it as a government that imposes is negatively correlated with these preferences across the entire sample.

More from our Archive