Why Democracies Endure Corruption: Protest, Contradiction, and the Epistemic Architecture of Stability
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Why do some democracies endure persistent and highly salient corruption without systemic rupture, while others experience rapid protest escalation and government collapse? This paper addresses that puzzle through a comparative analysis of the United States and Bulgaria. Conventional explanations—institutional design, political culture, polarisation, and legal accountability—account for differences in protest opportunity structures and removal mechanisms but do not explain a deeper asymmetry: why contradiction between democratic norms and elite behaviour stabilises into endurance in some contexts yet escalates into rupture in others. Drawing on comparative politics, protest theory, and political psychology, the paper reframes this problem as epistemic. It reconceptualises cognitive dissonance not merely as intrapsychic discomfort but as a socially distributed phenomenon embedded in collective epistemic environments. The paper introduces the concept of epistemic architecture to explain how media systems, partisan identities, civic networks, and institutional timelines structure the distribution, deferral, and resolution of ethical contradiction. Re-analysing the U.S. and Bulgarian cases through this lens shows that democratic stability and protest efficacy depend not only on institutional incentives or grievance intensity, but on a system’s capacity for contradiction metabolism—the ability to absorb, normalise, or concentrate ethical tension. Where epistemic architectures disperse contradiction, democratic endurance can persist even amid fiduciary strain; where such architectures fail, contradiction rapidly consolidates into mobilisation and political rupture.
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References
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