Across Europe, liberal democratic norms are being tested. In Greece and Cyprus, longstanding concerns about corruption, state capture, and institutional performance intertwine with emerging debates on surveillance, transparency, new polarisations and civic disaffection, producing an increasingly complex political and social landscape reflected in voting behaviour, party affiliation, civil mobilisation, and the rise of unconventional political formations.
This theme focuses on the structural challenges to democratic functioning in both Greece and Cyprus. It seeks to explore the erosion of trust in institutions, the role of corruption, political alienation, state capacity, and the evolving boundaries between state, market, and civil society. It also opens space to examine issues like deep state narratives, establishment resilience, authoritarian drift, or new forms of citizen activism.
Relevant research topics may include:
- Trust in democratic institutions and corruption perceptions: causes and consequences
- Surveillance, citizenship, and state power
- Forms of state capture (party/corporate), quality of institutions and political legitimacy
- Electoral disengagement and civic response to institutional failures; forms and impact of civic mobilisations.
- Role of media and misinformation in democratic erosion
- Democracy and political legitimacy in multi-crisis contexts (e.g., debt, pandemic, migration)
- New forms of populism: social media influencers in politics, “deep state” or anti-establishment narratives, and their impact in shaping political attitudes and behaviour