This paper presents a model of information quality and political regime change. If enough citizens act against a regime, it is overthrown. Citizens are imperfectly informed about how hard this will be and the regime can, at a cost, engage in propaganda so that at face-value it seems hard. The citizens are rational and evaluate their information knowing the regime's incentives. The model makes three predictions. First, even rational citizens may not correctly infer the amount of manipulation. Second, as the intrinsic quality of information available becomes sufficiently high, the regime is more likely to survive. Third, the regime benefits from ambiguity about the amount of manipulation, and consequently, as it becomes cheaper to manipulate,...
Does the information revolution empower the coercive control of repressive regimes at the expense of...
This paper considers the role of asymmetric information in a political agency theory of autocratic e...
In this paper we look at how information in societies is organized and how power relationships arise...
This paper presents a model of information quality and political regime change. If enough citizens a...
This paper presents a model of information manipulation and political regime change. There is a regi...
This article presents a model of information manipulation and political regime change. There is a re...
This paper studies endogenous information manipulation in games where a population can overthrow a r...
We show that when citizens are uncertain about whether a successful revolution will turn out better ...
This dissertation consists of three distinct articles that address two important but understudied qu...
How does the Internet affect authoritarian regimes? This article argues that while the Internet has ...
<p>Chapter 1: Forcing Consent: Information and Power in Non-Democratic Elections. Why do governments...
Paper given at the 2016 meeting of the American Political Science Association (APSA) in Philadephia....
Different political regimes have principals that possess different in- formation regarding agents’ b...
This paper presents a model of the interactions between a dictator and a mass of citizens in which ...
This paper presents an agency theory of revolutionary political transitions from autocracy to democr...
Does the information revolution empower the coercive control of repressive regimes at the expense of...
This paper considers the role of asymmetric information in a political agency theory of autocratic e...
In this paper we look at how information in societies is organized and how power relationships arise...
This paper presents a model of information quality and political regime change. If enough citizens a...
This paper presents a model of information manipulation and political regime change. There is a regi...
This article presents a model of information manipulation and political regime change. There is a re...
This paper studies endogenous information manipulation in games where a population can overthrow a r...
We show that when citizens are uncertain about whether a successful revolution will turn out better ...
This dissertation consists of three distinct articles that address two important but understudied qu...
How does the Internet affect authoritarian regimes? This article argues that while the Internet has ...
<p>Chapter 1: Forcing Consent: Information and Power in Non-Democratic Elections. Why do governments...
Paper given at the 2016 meeting of the American Political Science Association (APSA) in Philadephia....
Different political regimes have principals that possess different in- formation regarding agents’ b...
This paper presents a model of the interactions between a dictator and a mass of citizens in which ...
This paper presents an agency theory of revolutionary political transitions from autocracy to democr...
Does the information revolution empower the coercive control of repressive regimes at the expense of...
This paper considers the role of asymmetric information in a political agency theory of autocratic e...
In this paper we look at how information in societies is organized and how power relationships arise...