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                       Combined, these results indicate that hybrids have gained 26% over the last

                  decades, consequentially constituting the most prevalent group: 52% of South
                  Korean citizens. This group was a minority (26%) in 1996 but outnumbered full
                  democrats by a margin of 33% in 2018. Autocrats comprised only 8% in 1996,
                  but they have increased to 18% in 2018. Thus, it is apparent that hybridisation of

                  democratic and authoritarian orientations has become a dominant phenomenon in
                  the minds of South Korean citizens.

                       If hybridisation and autocratisation of regime support are associated with
                  democratic deconsolidation, what direction have Korean citizens driven in terms of

                  democratic deconsolidation? As signalled in Figure 23.2 and confirmed in Figure
                  23.3, while living with established democratic institutions, 52% of South Korean
                  citizens have advanced support for strongman rule. Whereas 38% of South Koreans
                  retain support for democracy, 14% have abandoned democratic support and have

                  embraced strongman rule as the most preferred regime type. These findings
                  suggest that cultural deconsolidation of South Korean democracy has already set in,
                  and the coming regime welcomed by a majority of citizens is likely to be strongman
                  rule with democratic institutions rather than military rule.


                       The final question remains to be answered: What social groups shoulder
                  South Korean democracy and drive its hybridisation with strongman authoritarian
                  rule? Recent scholars examining the trend of democratic support in the West have

                  debated which social segments evince the erosion of democratic support. For
                  example, Foa and Mounk (2016) found that democratic support has declined in the
                  West, and young millennials and rich citizens are sceptical of democracy and most
                  open to authoritarian alternatives. On the basis of the evidence, Foa and Mounk
                  (2016) warned that scholars are overly confident that old consolidated democracies

                  are unassailable and they fail to recognize signs of deconsolidation. Finally, Foa and
                  Mounk (2017) declared the end of the consolidation paradigm.

                       On the other hand, not all scholars agree with them. In particular, Inglehart
                  (2016) stated that declining support for democracy and increasing openness to

                  nondemocratic alternatives are not found across democracies but are apparent only
                  in the United States. This debate sparked subsequent online exchange in Journal of
                  Democracy, with Norris (2017) and other scholars (Alexander and Welzel 2017;             การอภิปราย

                  Voeten 2017) showing that the cultural foundation of democracy is solid and
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