Dictatorships are not all the same: some are purely autocratic but many exhibit a full panoply of seemingly democratic institutions. To explain these differences, we develop a model in which dictators may need co-operation to generate rents and may face a threat of rebellion. Dictators have two instruments: they can make policy concessions or share rents. We conclude that when they need more cooperation dictators make more extensive policy concessions and share fewer rents. In turn, when the threat of rebellion is greater, they make larger concessions but also distribute more spoils. Assuming that policy concessions require an in-stitutional setting of legislatures and parties, we test this prediction statistically for all dictatorships tha...
History provides many examples of benevolent dictators who become increasingly repressive and new de...
Abstract The possibility of treason by a close associate has been a nightmare of most dictators thro...
All dictatorships provide public goods, but levels of provision generally differ from those found i...
Dictatorships are not all the same: some are purely autocratic but many exhibit a full panoply of se...
Dictatorships are not all the same: some are purely autocratic but many exhibit a full panoply of se...
Why do some dictatorships establish institutions that are typically associated with democracy, such ...
Why do some dictatorships establish institutions that may constrain their leaders? We argue that ins...
Why do some dictatorships establish institutions typically associated with democ-racy, such as legis...
Do domestic institutions affect how dictators respond to their political opposition? In this paper, ...
Non-democratic regimes vary in the degree to which domestic groups threaten their rule and the exten...
How does the anticipation of external support affect dictators’ domestic political behavior? We lack...
The recent revival of authoritarianism and worldwide losses in democratic quality merit a reassessme...
Theories of authoritarianism assert that autocratic governments follow repressive and redistributive...
Why do autocrats allow legislatures, parties and elections? These nominally democratic in- stitution...
A comparative analysis of the institutions of political domination and control of masi dictatorship...
History provides many examples of benevolent dictators who become increasingly repressive and new de...
Abstract The possibility of treason by a close associate has been a nightmare of most dictators thro...
All dictatorships provide public goods, but levels of provision generally differ from those found i...
Dictatorships are not all the same: some are purely autocratic but many exhibit a full panoply of se...
Dictatorships are not all the same: some are purely autocratic but many exhibit a full panoply of se...
Why do some dictatorships establish institutions that are typically associated with democracy, such ...
Why do some dictatorships establish institutions that may constrain their leaders? We argue that ins...
Why do some dictatorships establish institutions typically associated with democ-racy, such as legis...
Do domestic institutions affect how dictators respond to their political opposition? In this paper, ...
Non-democratic regimes vary in the degree to which domestic groups threaten their rule and the exten...
How does the anticipation of external support affect dictators’ domestic political behavior? We lack...
The recent revival of authoritarianism and worldwide losses in democratic quality merit a reassessme...
Theories of authoritarianism assert that autocratic governments follow repressive and redistributive...
Why do autocrats allow legislatures, parties and elections? These nominally democratic in- stitution...
A comparative analysis of the institutions of political domination and control of masi dictatorship...
History provides many examples of benevolent dictators who become increasingly repressive and new de...
Abstract The possibility of treason by a close associate has been a nightmare of most dictators thro...
All dictatorships provide public goods, but levels of provision generally differ from those found i...