Elections are now held in almost every country in the world. Yet the introduction of electoral processes in developing countries has led to a mix of voting and violence rather than the establishment of peace and stability, as violence in recent elections in Afghanistan, Bangladesh, Kenya, and Zimbabwe illustrates. Developing countries display various forms of violence closely linked to elections, such as incumbents intimidating opposition candidates and voters, armed groups using violence to disrupt electoral processes, or rioting between the supporters of opposing political parties. Until recently, a lack of globally available data complicated efforts to properly describe and understand election violence. This paper uses disaggregated even...
This database includes data on electoral violence interventions undertaken by the United National De...
The benefits of winning elections, and the disadvantages of losing them, must be reduced to avoid th...
It is impossible to think about democracy without elections. The litmus test of any electoral proces...
Elections are held in nearly all countries in the contemporary world. Yet despite their aim of allow...
Elections are held in nearly all countries in the contemporary world. Yet despite their aim of allow...
Multiparty elections have become the bellwether by which all democracies are judged, and the spread ...
Submitted in fulfillment of the academic requirements towards a degree in Doctor of Philosophy (PhD)...
The dataset of Countries at Risk of Electoral Violence (CREV) provides detailed dyadic information o...
Elections are held in nearly all countries in the contemporary world. Yet despite their aim of allow...
This article introduces the Deadly Electoral Conflict dataset (DECO): a global, georeferenced event ...
I develop a theory of pre‐electoral violence, in which parties resort to violent tactics if politica...
Thesis (Ph.D.)--University of Washington, 2015In the last few decades, thousands have died in electi...
What makes some regions within a country more likely to experience electoral violence than others ? ...
Since the beginning of the 1990s, the majority of the Sub-Saharan African countries have started hol...
This article argues that the increasing international interest in elections as exemplified by the ri...
This database includes data on electoral violence interventions undertaken by the United National De...
The benefits of winning elections, and the disadvantages of losing them, must be reduced to avoid th...
It is impossible to think about democracy without elections. The litmus test of any electoral proces...
Elections are held in nearly all countries in the contemporary world. Yet despite their aim of allow...
Elections are held in nearly all countries in the contemporary world. Yet despite their aim of allow...
Multiparty elections have become the bellwether by which all democracies are judged, and the spread ...
Submitted in fulfillment of the academic requirements towards a degree in Doctor of Philosophy (PhD)...
The dataset of Countries at Risk of Electoral Violence (CREV) provides detailed dyadic information o...
Elections are held in nearly all countries in the contemporary world. Yet despite their aim of allow...
This article introduces the Deadly Electoral Conflict dataset (DECO): a global, georeferenced event ...
I develop a theory of pre‐electoral violence, in which parties resort to violent tactics if politica...
Thesis (Ph.D.)--University of Washington, 2015In the last few decades, thousands have died in electi...
What makes some regions within a country more likely to experience electoral violence than others ? ...
Since the beginning of the 1990s, the majority of the Sub-Saharan African countries have started hol...
This article argues that the increasing international interest in elections as exemplified by the ri...
This database includes data on electoral violence interventions undertaken by the United National De...
The benefits of winning elections, and the disadvantages of losing them, must be reduced to avoid th...
It is impossible to think about democracy without elections. The litmus test of any electoral proces...