“…Studies examining contemporary differences across Italian regions strongly suggest that extended experiences with self-government-even if in the highly distant past-are relevant for outcomes such as civic engagement (Putnam, Leonardi and Nanetti, 1993, 121-162), the belief that one's actions can meaningfully shape life prospects , and economic development (Di Liberto and Sideri, 2015). Research on local interventions under authoritarianism paints a similar picture, tying autocratic interventions to persistent anti-democratic attitudes and poor governance outcomes in countries including Chile (González, Muñoz andPrem, 2021), Indonesia (Martinez-Bravo, 2014;Martinez-Bravo, Mukherjee and Stegmann, 2017), Romania (Vogler, 2022), and Vietnam (Dell, Lane and Querubin, 2018). Also conforming with this perspective is scholarship on Soviet intervention in Eastern Europe, which it links to attitudes hostile to democracy (Besley and Persson, 2019;Neundorf, 2010;.…”