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Hauptverfasser: Uhlig, Joshua, Pirker-Díaz, Paula, Wilson, Matthew, Metzler, Ralf, Wiesner, Karoline
Format: Preprint
Veröffentlicht: 2026
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Online-Zugang:https://arxiv.org/abs/2603.05994
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author Uhlig, Joshua
Pirker-Díaz, Paula
Wilson, Matthew
Metzler, Ralf
Wiesner, Karoline
author_facet Uhlig, Joshua
Pirker-Díaz, Paula
Wilson, Matthew
Metzler, Ralf
Wiesner, Karoline
contents The emergence and decline of democratic systems worldwide raises fundamental questions about the dynamics of political change. Contrary to the idea of a stable endpoint of liberal democracy, recent backsliding towards less democratic regimes highlights the non-stationary nature of regime evolution. Here, we analyse the historical trajectories of countries within a two-dimensional regime space derived from the principal components of the Varieties of Democracy dataset. We observe weakly non-ergodic dynamics unfolding in an effective landscape characterised by sparse and shifting basins of stability. Step sizes and sojourn times characterising this dynamics follow heavy-tailed distributions near the critical regime, in which mean values appear to diverge. These facts point to the intermittent and heterogeneous nature of the regime change dynamics. A continuous time random walk model reproduces the dynamics of the three most recent decades with remarkable accuracy. Together, these results suggest that some aspects of political regime evolution follow universal stochastic principles, while remaining punctuated by unique historical pathways.
format Preprint
id arxiv_https___arxiv_org_abs_2603_05994
institution arXiv
publishDate 2026
record_format arxiv
spellingShingle Critical dynamics govern the evolution of political regimes
Uhlig, Joshua
Pirker-Díaz, Paula
Wilson, Matthew
Metzler, Ralf
Wiesner, Karoline
Statistical Mechanics
Physics and Society
The emergence and decline of democratic systems worldwide raises fundamental questions about the dynamics of political change. Contrary to the idea of a stable endpoint of liberal democracy, recent backsliding towards less democratic regimes highlights the non-stationary nature of regime evolution. Here, we analyse the historical trajectories of countries within a two-dimensional regime space derived from the principal components of the Varieties of Democracy dataset. We observe weakly non-ergodic dynamics unfolding in an effective landscape characterised by sparse and shifting basins of stability. Step sizes and sojourn times characterising this dynamics follow heavy-tailed distributions near the critical regime, in which mean values appear to diverge. These facts point to the intermittent and heterogeneous nature of the regime change dynamics. A continuous time random walk model reproduces the dynamics of the three most recent decades with remarkable accuracy. Together, these results suggest that some aspects of political regime evolution follow universal stochastic principles, while remaining punctuated by unique historical pathways.
title Critical dynamics govern the evolution of political regimes
topic Statistical Mechanics
Physics and Society
url https://arxiv.org/abs/2603.05994