Christopher Kedzie
We have argued that electronic mail networks create social capital by strengthening the mission-oriented and interpersonal ties within on-line communities. The social benefits in the domestic setting are addressed in Chapter Five. We now turn to the international arena into which the democratizing influences of e-mail extend. Since the technology, unconstrained by geographic borders and political barriers, shrinks the globe, the effect of interconnectivity on democracy worldwide is only one of myriad international implications warranting particular attention.
Increasingly, formal and informal e-mail assist relationships in transcending national frontiers. Universal e-mail in the United States with abundant international connections can help to spread the seeds of democracy even to nondemocratic lands. Global democratization is critically important to the future of democracy in America. According to scholars such as Samuel P. Huntington (1984) and Charles S. Maier (1994), the prospects for democracy here are inexorably linked to the state of democracy worldwide and our national commitment to global democratization.
Coincident revolutions at the end of the 1980s--breakthroughs in democracy, communication, and information technologies around the globe--have suggested to pundits and politicians that democratic freedom worldwide and electronic interconnectivity might be positively correlated. Prominently on Russian television in 1994, President Clinton made the association, "Revolutions [in] information and communication and technology and production, all these things make democracy more likely" (1994). Analysts too have postulated this relationship, but to date, all evidence has been anecdotal.[1] Most common are stories of fax messages rallying prodemocracy demonstrators outside the Chinese "Forbidden City" in 1989 and of the e- mail messages emanating from the besieged Russian "White House" during the failed coup of 1991.
This chapter begins substantive examination, both empirical and theoretical, into the relationship between new information and communications technologies and democracy. First, our investigations reject the "null hypothesis" that interconnectivity and democracy are not correlated. Then, we empirically examine the relationship through a variety of statistical lenses, followed by some comments on causality and some policy conclusions.
Visual evidence of this relationship is provocative. Figure 6.1 shows Freedom House democracy ratings for all countries of the world. Darker shading indicate higher levels of democracy.
Figure 6.2 is a comparable world projection denoting prevalence of major worldwide e-mail exchanging computer networks.
The metric used in the second chart is termed "interconnectivity."[2] Darker shading indicates a greater level of interconnectivity. Corresponding regions of dark and light on every continent reveal striking similarities between the two charts. The pattern similarity suggests a correlation and inspires more rigorous examination.
The two variables, democracy and interconnectivity, underlie this chapter's statistical analyses. Freedom House publishes quantitative measures of democracy in the Comparative Survey of Freedom for 1993-1994. This survey ranks every country in terms of "political rights," the extent to which people freely participate in selecting policymakers and formulating policy and "civil liberties," the extent to which people are able to develop and express ideas independent of the state's. Since the correlation between these two measures is high, the independent "democracy" variable used here is the normalized average.[3]
This use of Freedom House data conforms with academic practice for evaluating correlates to democracy.[4] There are inherent difficulties in quantifying a subjective multidimensional democratic quality across widely varying governments with a single scalar.[5] Despite these problems, a practical consensus for relative rankings prevails quite broadly. Conformity in ordinal rankings suggests that, although the concept of democracy may be difficult to describe explicitly, it is well understood intuitively (at least by Western analysts). Alex Inkeles noted this agreement between various metrics for democracy:
[D]emocracy is a distinctive and highly coherent syndrome of characteristics such that anyone measuring only a few of the salient characteristics will classify nations in much the same way as will another analyst who also measured only a few qualities but uses a different set of characteristics, so long as both have selected their indicators from the same larger pool of valid measures. Far from being like the elephant confronting the blind sages, democracy is more like a ball of wax. (Inkeles et al., 1990, p. 5.)
The prevalence of information revolution technologies may seem easier to quantify because it involves keeping track of tangible equipment. Yet, this variable is problematic, too. Some difficulties are definitional. As communication technologies increasingly overlap, recalling Ithiel de Sola Pool's "convergence of modes" (1983, p. 23), what to include becomes a difficult question to answer. Computers can send faxes; radio waves and television cables can carry e-mail messages.
Electronic mail is the specific focus of this study because it enables people to discourse across borders in ways that have never been possible. Of the numerous e-mail networks, four are globally dominant: Internet, BITNET, UUCP and FidoNet. Record keeping has not been consistent, regular, or accurate across the networks. The best available and most comprehensive data are for the numbers of nodes, which therefore constitute the basic unit of measure for interconnectivity in this report.
Nodes themselves, however, are not equal, even within the same network. A node may consist of a single computer and user or an entire organization with many of both. The Matrix Information Directory Service (MIDS) tracks and maintains historic data on the size of these networks aggregated by country. The "interconnectivity" metric used here is a combined measure of MIDS data on nodes per capita per country for each of the four major computer systems that can exchange electronic mail. Within each network, countries are ranked and scored with a number from 0 to 4. The 0 is assigned to all countries with no nodes in a particular network. The numbers 1 through 4 are assigned by quartile. The lowest quartile of countries with one or more nodes for a network receives a score of 1. The highest quartile of countries receives a score of 4. The sum of the four scores determines the level of interconnectivity on a scale from 0 to 16.
The combined scores weight each of the four networks equally because the ability to exchange e-mail is a relatively generic capability. Nevertheless, the equal weightings introduce some theoretic difficulties. Although each network supports e-mail, they are not necessarily comparable in other respects. For instance, the Internet, with specialized services such as the World Wide Web and remote log on, has much more functional capacity than the others. Therefore, it is arithmetically possible that a country with a low interconnectivity score and Internet actually may have more communications capability than a country with a higher score but no Internet. In practice, this is not likely to occur, and our analysis shows none of the potential degradation of this variable.
For several reasons, this theoretic possibility is not a practical problem. First, e-mail, but not necessarily the other services, offers the specific capability that is hypothesized to have dynamic implications for democratization: multidirectional discourse across borders in a timely and inexpensive manner, unbounded by geographic and institutional constraints.[6] Second, interconnectivity evolves. Less-capable systems are similarly less expensive and easier to implement, so initially they are more prevalent. Improvements to these systems ultimately incorporate Internet capabilities. Thus, a general progression emerges in the enhancement of interconnectivity that this scale approximates. Furthermore, to the extent that interconnectivity as a predictor for democracy is measured imprecisely, the effect is reduced statistical significance of the predictor. Thus, the conclusions would still be valid, a fortiori, from this analysis.
Figures 6.1 and 6.2 suggest a specific conjecture that univariate analyses support. A strong correlation between democracy and interconnectivity does, indeed, exist.
The scatterplot and accompanying regression line in Figure 6.3 display this relationship graphically, and the following correlation matrix in Table 6.1 displays this relationship numerically. The correlation matrix includes a set of social indicators that are often hypothesized as democracy's causal correlates. Descriptions and explanations of the variables follow these graphics.
Matrix Showing First-Order Correlations
The question of causality will be addressed in detail below,
but as the matrix attests, the correlation coefficient for
interconnectivity is not only large, it is substantially
larger than that of any other traditional predictors of
democracy. The coefficient on per-capita gross domestic
product (GDP) is smaller by 0.16.
Economic development, reported here as a per-capita GDP (and
abbreviated simply as GDP), is quantified in terms of
purchasing power parity, as is traditional. Education is
commonly paired with economic development as a predictor of
democracy.[7] Direct causality is easy to
imagine. An educated public is likely to be both more aware
of political events and more capable of intervening to
influence them. Indirectly, education conceivably enhances
democracy by contributing to economic growth. The average
number of years of schooling across the entire population is
considered to be the best measure of education for analyses
such as these (Rowen, 1995, p. 57).
Human development and health indicators also are often
correlated with democracy. Most prevalent in the literature
are infant mortality rates and life expectancies.[8] A causal argument could be posed that as
citizens become more assured of their own well-being they
have more incentive and wherewithal to demand civil rights
and political liberties. Although these two measures, infant
mortality and life expectancy, are highly correlated, forward
causality seems more plausible in terms of the latter.[9]
Cultural and ethnic factors also may have certain roles in
democratization. "Homogeneous national entities may be more
likely to evolve into peaceable democracies than states rent
by harsh linguistic and cultural antagonisms" (Gottlieb,
1994, p. 101). A measure of ethnic homogeneity is the
percentage of the population that constitutes the largest
ethnic group in a nation.[10]
In multivariate analyses, cultural differences across
countries are potentially more important than the internal
mix. Debates continue as to whether certain cultures or
civilizations are favorably disposed or fundamentally
disinclined to embrace democratic principles.[11] In either case, it is not difficult to
believe that cultural aspects influence the characterization
of the political regimes and the appreciation of personal
liberties. To account for these effects, the dataset
includes binary variables that indicate the culture with
which each country most closely identifies. Demarcation
between cultures can never be exact. Inexorably, the
classification of some countries into any of the regional
categories is susceptible to quibbling. Six regional
categories were defined that incorporated elements of
geography, history, and religion.
These six--Africa, Asia, Eurasia, Latin America, the Middle
East, and Western Europe--map reasonably well onto the eight
civilizations identified by Samuel Huntington (1993).
Western Europe also includes countries that are not on the
continent but that have a dominant Western European heritage:
the United States, Canada, Australia, and New Zealand.
Israel also is included in the West European category. The
Middle East category is predominantly Muslim, includes the
Islamic North African states, and extends from Egypt to
Pakistan. Africa is defined in fairly obvious geographic
terms including South Africa, minus the northern states
grouped into the Middle East. Asia includes the Confucian
countries and the Pacific Islands, plus India and Japan,
minus North Korea. Latin America stretches from Mexico
through Argentina including all the Caribbean except Cuba.
Cuba and North Korea, plus Albania and the splinter states of
Yugoslavia, in addition to the members of the former Warsaw
Pact countries, are all grouped in the Eurasian category.
Cultural influences may also shape the ways various people
use communication technologies. Therefore, some of the
regression models that follow include interaction terms that
are the products of the binary regional variables and the
interconnectivity scores.
Population completes this list of independent variables.
Presumably, the size of a country could influence the type
and effectiveness of governance. Small countries may be
anomalous. Therefore, only countries whose populations
exceeded 1,000,000 (and for which data are available) in 1993
are included in this study.[12] Above
this threshold minimum, country populations have a skewed
distribution that spans more than three orders of magnitude.
Population, therefore, is best included here as an
independent variable in a log form.
Like the maps presented above, the correlation matrix
exhibits a surprisingly powerful correlation between
interconnectivity and democracy. In large complex systems
such international politics, simple relationships can rarely
tell the whole story. Multiple linear regression can be a
powerful technique to provide insight into convoluted
interactions. As with other techniques, the answers are
often influenced by the way the questions are asked. In
other words, regression results can be model-specific.
Therefore, several versions of the model offer various
perspectives that can be integrated to form a comprehensive
understanding of the interactions. Ultimately, the multiple
linear regressions in this research provide further evidence
that we cannot dismiss this correlation as spurious.
Regression results of six representative and most
informative models are shown in Table 6.2. Models I and II
show the resulting statistical output of ordinary least
squares (OLS) regressions. Model I is an inclusive model
involving six predictors.
Regression Models
Immediately apparent is that, again, interconnectivity
emerges as the dominant predictor. With greater than 99.9
percent certainty, higher than that for any other predictor,
one can reject the null hypothesis that there is no
relationship between democracy and interconnectivity.
Furthermore, the coefficient on interconnectivity is large.
A single point increase on the interconnectivity scale
corresponds to an increase of 5 points in democracy rating.
The correlation of GDP with democracy in this model, which is
also statistically significant, is interesting in that the
sign is negative. This result supports arguments of some
scholars, as well as apologists for the Pinochet and Lee Kuan
Yu economic development theories, that democracy is not
without cost.[13] All else being equal,
such as interconnectivity and population, greater economic
development might be available only at the expense of
democratization.
Years of schooling and life expectancy also show statistical
significance. In the case of the latter, the negative sign
is more difficult to explain, although this is the weakest of
the significant predictors. The coefficient on population is
also significant, but the size of a country's population,
largely inaccessible to foreign intervention, offers scarcely
few policy recommendations (except perhaps to shine a glimmer
of hope on the fractious states of Yugoslavia and the former
Soviet Union, which potentially may have a more democratic
future than their larger predecessors.)
Model II contains a more parsimonious model retaining only
GDP, the log of population, and the interconnectivity
variable. These fewer variables continue to explain more
than 50 percent of the variation in democracy for 141
countries. After excluding three predictors, the small drop
in Adjusted R[2] (0.047) underlines the
relative importance of interconnectivity. Alternatively,
when retaining those three variables and excluding
interconnectivity, the goodness of fit measure decreases by
more than twice as much. In other words, interconnectivity
alone may be more important for predicting the level of
democracy than these three independent variables combined.
The effects of multicollinearity also deserve some attention.
The correlation matrix in Table 6.1 indicates high
correlations between many of the independent variables,
particularly those of specific interest to this
investigation: GDP, interconnectivity, and schooling.
Collinearities between independent variables will tend to
reduce the efficiency of predictors, but without bias. This
means that the reported statistical significance may be less
than the actual because the standard errors will be
excessively large but the estimated coefficients will be
neither higher nor lower than they ought to be. Relative to
the result-specific tests, inferences regarding
interconnectivity would not change because they appear with
the highest reported level of statistical significance
anyway. However, we may be slightly understating the effect
of GDP (or the other predictors), since they may lose some
statistical significance to the interconnectivity variable
with which they are collinear. The magnitude of the
coefficient on GDP is, nevertheless, quite small, and it is
reported without bias in Model I. Furthermore, the
coefficients themselves to not vary much with the consecutive
inclusion or exclusion of the other independent variables.
This indication, too, downplays the likelihood that
multicollinearities could be adversely influencing these
results.
Models III and IV, with the addition of the regional
interaction terms, are analogous to I and II, respectively.
These next two models show that the positive correlation of
interconnectivity with democracy is consistent across and
within regional boundaries. In all the regions, the
coefficient is positive. In half of the regions, the
coefficient is substantial and statistically significant.
The correlation is most pronounced in those regions
undergoing dramatic political transformation. This fact is
important when considering causality. If the correlation
were positive only where democracy preceded the information
revolution, one might be able to argue that the latter
strengthened the former but certainly not that the latter
caused the former. The evidence, however, is that the
relationship is weakest in regions characterized by
established democracies and strongest in regions that are
cultivating nascent democracies.
In Africa, the coefficient on the interaction term is the
highest, and the t-statistics correspond to a 1 percent level
of significance or better. In Eurasia, the results are
similar with the t-statistic also indicating 1 percent as the
lowest significance level. The coefficient is also
substantial for Latin America with a 10 percent significance
level on Model IV. The regression lines that accompany the
six scatterplots in Figure 6.4 approximate these multivariate
regression results for visual comparison. Western Europe
shows the most paltry correlation. In this region, the high
interconnectivity levels do not vary much and the high
democracy ratings move even less.
It may be tempting to infer causality from these strong
correlations and conclude that interconnectivity influences
democratization. However, to do so might be premature.
Causality could, in fact, flow in the opposite direction.
Democracies rely on an informed public and uninhibited
communication and may therefore seek interconnectivity. One
way to test this possibility analytically is via a system of
simultaneous equations and two-stage least squares (2SLS)
estimation. Simply, this two-equation model assumes that
interconnectivity can influence democracy and also that
democracy can influence interconnectivity. Then we can
compare the relative statistical significance and sizes of
the coefficients on these variables in each of the two
equations. To perform these tests, both democracy and
interconnectivity are both dependent variables in Model V.
And to obtain a unique solution, at least one additional
variable called an "instrumental variable" must be included
in the interconnectivity equation. Since electronic mail is
text-based and travels over telephones lines, appropriate
instruments are percentage literacy and the number of
telephone lines per capita. Independent variables in the
democracy equation are, as before, related to economic
growth, human development, and ethnicity.
The resulting regression coefficients are also listed above
in Table 6.2. Interconnectivity remains a powerful predictor
of democracy as before. The magnitude of the coefficient for
interconnectivity on democracy is even greater than in the
comparable OLS model. The level of significance remains
exceptionally high. Democracy, however, does not prove to
have any significant effect on interconnectivity. Thus, the
suggestion that democracy leads to interconnectivity is not
supported while the hypothesis that there is no positive
effect cannot be rejected. The coefficient on population is
still negative and significant. The coefficient on GDP is
also still negatively and nearly significant at the 10
percent level. The other outputs also closely parallel those
of Model I.
The other alternative explanation for the strong correlation
between interconnectivity and democracy is that a third
variable may influence both simultaneously. The obvious
candidate is economic development, which many contend is an
important prerequisite for democracy.[14]
The correlation between interconnectivity and GDP, at 0.84,
is also high, suggesting that the third variable hypothesis
deserves further examination. In practical terms, equipment
necessary to communicate electronically is expensive,
especially for citizens of the Third World regions that
Western democratization policy would be most eager to
influence. The same economic resources that can finance
participation in the communications revolution could
conceivably fuel demands for personal rights and freedoms.
Again, a system of simultaneous equations can help unravel
complex reciprocal effects. Model VI includes all three
dependent variables: GDP, democracy, and interconnectivity.
The following are the set of assumptions that underlie this
three-equation model: Economic development and
interconnectivity predict democracy; democracy and economic
development predict interconnectivity; and interconnectivity
and democracy predict economic development. We can compare
the relative effects of the predictors as before in Model V.
The interconnectivity equation uses the same two instrumental
variables. The independent variables in the democracy
equation are the same as before except that schooling is used
to serve as an instrument for economic growth in accordance
with prevailing theory. Scholars surmise that education can
influence democracy by increasing personal and national
wealth, as discussed above. The 2SLS estimation results,
shown in Table 6.2, are consistent with all those that
preceded and do not support the hypothesis of economic
development as the confounding third variable. Strongly to
the contrary, the regression coefficients for
interconnectivity on democracy and GDP are both substantial
and statistically significant, again above the 0.1 percent
level. Neither democracy nor GDP proves to influence
interconnectivity strongly. GDP again shows a negative
correlation with democracy at a 10 percent significance
level.
In each model presented here, without exception,
interconnectivity positively correlates with democracy at
high levels of significance. In each model, at lower but
still high significance, the correlation with population on
democracy is negative. Stories to explain both the country
size and the interconnectivity phenomena may share a common
plot. Smaller size and greater interconnectivity may
similarly be conducive to democracy by facilitating
coordinated civic action. Although perhaps clich[[??]], the
often repeated analogy that information revolution
technologies are shrinking the world offers appropriate
insight. Interestingly, the most populous country that
Freedom House labels as completely "free" became a democracy
in 1776 when its population was only a fraction of its
current size. At that time and at that size, available
communication technologies, such as pamphleteering, were
sufficient to gel public support into popular action.
It is the globe as a whole, however, that is "shrinking" in
the wash of information flows. The worldwide expansion of
democracy may have less to do with how these technologies
favor domestic democratic processes than with how they spread
democratic ideals internationally. Information revolution
technologies enable citizens of prospective democracies to
learn more about how other societies operate. If they
discover that others living elsewhere live better thanks to
democratic governance, they are likely to seek
democratization. At the same time, information revolution
technologies empower citizens anywhere to broadcast charges
that their own governments have violated inalienable human
rights. Thus, world pressure can be brought to bear against
repressive regimes unable to hide their misdeeds as
successfully as before. That demonstrators in Tiananmen
Square displayed signs written in English was not a
coincidence. Cross-border communication in the defense of
democracy and human rights is the activity on which citizen
diplomacy groups such as Amnesty International stake their
success. The new technologies enhance these capabilities.
Governments that try to squelch the new information
technologies to protect their monopoly on power do so
essentially at the peril of economic growth. This is the
inference from Model VI and is precisely what leading
analysts have been predicting: "For nations to be
economically competitive, they must allow individual citizens
access to information networks and computer technology. In
doing so, they cede significant control over economic,
cultural, and eventually political events in their countries"
(Builder, 1993, p. 160).
Despite inherent limitations of statistical analyses, every
analytic perspective of this study coherently and repeatedly
emphasizes that interconnectivity is a powerful predictor of
democracy, more so than any of democracy's traditional
correlates.
Measurable effects of this technology on global
democratization resonate with arguments to justify a national
universal e-mail system: E-mail can help vitalize or
reinvigorate democratic governance. Thus, the analysis from
this chapter leads to two important conclusions. First, the
United States should support increased interconnectivity
abroad, as this may aid the spread of democracy. Second and
more broadly, the development of a national e-mail system
must consider the international implications. Worldwide
democratization is both a critical and demonstrable
implication, but there are others. Previous chapters have
alluded to standardization and security, for example.
"National" in the context of e-mail is at best a misnomer; at
worst, it could mislead policy. Policies that derive
specifically from a commitment to universalize e-mail within
this country will interact with and affect events far beyond
the domestic milieu.
[2]"Interconnectivity" is a term
popularized by Larry Landweber for his measures of the
proliferation of global e-mail networks.
[3]Freedom House rates countries on a
decreasing basis from 7 to 1 in both categories, civil
liberties and political rights. A ranking of "1" indicates
the highest relative accordance with the principles of
democracy, and a ranking of "7," the lowest. The normalized
average used here and elsewhere (see Rowen, 1995, or Muller
and Seligson, 1994, for other examples) converts the scale to
one that increases from 0 to 100, such that maximum democracy
has the highest rating.
[4]For several examples see, the World Bank
(1991), Starr (1991), Helliwell (1992), Lipset, Seong, and
Torres (1993), Muller and Seligson (1994), Boone (1994), and
Rowen (1995).
[5]Many of the measurement and statistical
difficulties are addressed in considerable depth by Inkeles
et al. (1990) and Dahl (1971).
[6]The essence of multidirectional
communication is that all people who receive information via
a certain information channel can participate equally within
the complete and identical context of the discussion.
Another term commonly used to describe multidirectional
communication has been "many-to-many." However, this term
can be misleading. The connotation of "many" in one-to-many
can be the billion or so people around the globe who watch
soccer's World Cup, which would of course be impossibly
unwieldy for many-to-many. More important, quantifying the
number of participants misses the most critical aspect of
multidirectional communication. Independent of how many
people are involved--even if there are only three--e-mail
technology creates a different dynamic from unidirectional
broadcast or bidirectional intercourse and thus might be
expected to have differing social and political outcomes.
[7]For examples see Lipset (1959),
Helliwell (1992), Lipset, Seong, and Torres (1993), and Rowen
(1995).
[8]For examples, see the World Bank (1991)
and Boone (1994).
[9]United Nations Development Programme
(1993) provided all the economic, education, and health data
used in these analyses.
[10]These data are published in the CIA
World Fact Book (1993). In a few cases, mostly in
Northern Europe and Africa, these data were not available.
Where applicable, the percentage of largest religious
affiliation substituted for the missing data.
[11]For characteristic arguments from both
sides of the debate, see Huntington (1993) and Schifter
(1994).
[12]Data were either missing or relative
to inconsistent entities for many of the new countries
resulting from the recent breakups of Czechoslovakia and
Yugoslavia. Therefore, the Czech and Slovak Republics,
Bosnia-Herzogovina, Croatia, Serbia, and Slovenia were
excluded from this study. Additionally, critical missing
data precluded the inclusion of Taiwan.
[13]For more discussion on the potentially
negative economic consequences of democratization, see Shin
(1994) or Rothstein (1991).
[14]The seminal work on this topic is
Lipset (1959) but the literature is large. Also see, for
example, Helliwell (1992), Lipset, Seong, and Torres (1993),
and Rowen (1995).

Multivariate Dominance


Conclusions and Recommendations
[1]See, for example, Builder and Bankes
(1991) and Ganley (1991).
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