In this paper we investigate the efficacy of illicit electoral tactics and the characteristics which make a society prone to such tactics. We first investigate the chances of an incumbent head of government winning an election. We find that in those elections in which illicit tactics were prevalent the chances of incumbent victory increase substantially, more than doubling the expected duration in office. Further, illicit tactics sharply reduce the importance of good economic performance for survival in office. We then investigate what makes a society prone to illicit electoral tactics. Both structural conditions and institutions matter. Societies that are small, low-income, and resource-rich have little chance of a clean election unless th...
<p>Chapter 1: Forcing Consent: Information and Power in Non-Democratic Elections. Why do governments...
In this paper, I develop a career concerns model of government policy choice within a dynamic optima...
The paper examines electoral performance for incumbents in democratic regimes. I explore whether par...
In this paper we investigate the efficacy of illicit electoral tactics and the characteristics which...
In this paper we investigate the efficacy of illicit electoral tactics and the characteristics which...
In mature democracies, elections discipline leaders to deliver good economic performance. Since the ...
In competitive authoritarian regimes, formal democratic institutions and periodic elections are spon...
Elections ought in theory to go a long way towards making democracy ‘work’, but in many contexts, th...
How do political actors choose between different tactics of electoral manipulation, and how does the...
If democracy is to have the good effects said to justify it, it must be self-enforcing in that incum...
Democracy is not necessarily consolidated simply by the introduction of formal democratic institutio...
What role does electoral fraud play in nondemocracies? In this paper, we offer an empirical test of ...
How, if at all, do nondemocratic elections affect credible signaling in interna-tional crises? While...
Thesis (Ph. D.)--University of Rochester. Department of Political Science, 2014.In the developing wo...
Why do some elections spark violence whilst others do not? That is a question that has gained increa...
<p>Chapter 1: Forcing Consent: Information and Power in Non-Democratic Elections. Why do governments...
In this paper, I develop a career concerns model of government policy choice within a dynamic optima...
The paper examines electoral performance for incumbents in democratic regimes. I explore whether par...
In this paper we investigate the efficacy of illicit electoral tactics and the characteristics which...
In this paper we investigate the efficacy of illicit electoral tactics and the characteristics which...
In mature democracies, elections discipline leaders to deliver good economic performance. Since the ...
In competitive authoritarian regimes, formal democratic institutions and periodic elections are spon...
Elections ought in theory to go a long way towards making democracy ‘work’, but in many contexts, th...
How do political actors choose between different tactics of electoral manipulation, and how does the...
If democracy is to have the good effects said to justify it, it must be self-enforcing in that incum...
Democracy is not necessarily consolidated simply by the introduction of formal democratic institutio...
What role does electoral fraud play in nondemocracies? In this paper, we offer an empirical test of ...
How, if at all, do nondemocratic elections affect credible signaling in interna-tional crises? While...
Thesis (Ph. D.)--University of Rochester. Department of Political Science, 2014.In the developing wo...
Why do some elections spark violence whilst others do not? That is a question that has gained increa...
<p>Chapter 1: Forcing Consent: Information and Power in Non-Democratic Elections. Why do governments...
In this paper, I develop a career concerns model of government policy choice within a dynamic optima...
The paper examines electoral performance for incumbents in democratic regimes. I explore whether par...