This article provides an explanation for the significant variation in coups in autocracies. The existing theoretical literature focuses on the strategies that leaders use to thwart mass mobilization and survive in power. However, most autocratic leaders lose power through a coup, indicating that the main threats to political survival in autocracies emerge from insiders and not from outside the incumbent coalition. This article focuses on leaders' strategies to mitigate elite threats and argues that autocrats' strategies of co-optation and repression within the ruling elite and the armed forces affect the risk of coups in opposite ways. Elected authoritarian legislatures are instruments that leaders employ to co-opt members of the incumbent ...
This article examines how authoritarian parties and legislatures affect regime survival. While autho...
A large proportion of coup attempts in autocracies occur in the aftermath of elections, yet little s...
Political leaders face threats to their power from both within and outside the regime. Leaders can b...
This article provides an explanation for the significant variation in coups in autocracies. The exis...
This article provides an explanation for the significant variation in coups in autocracies. The exis...
Why do autocrats allow legislatures, parties and elections? These nominally democratic in- stitution...
Why do some leaders eliminate rivals from authoritarian regimes and therefore diminish elites' capab...
Current explanations of coup activity focus on the regime factors that makes them more likely to be ...
Under what conditions do political leaders take strategies that allow them to reduce militaries' cap...
In contrast to the conventional wisdom that democratization reduces coups, 46% of coups targeted dem...
Theoretical models on autocracies have long grappled with how to characterize and analyze state spon...
All autocrats rely on inner-circle elites to stay in power. It is commonly assumed that dictators wi...
A large proportion of coup attempts in autocracies occur in the aftermath of elections, yet little s...
Literature on coup-proofing often suggests that such activities reduce military effectiveness, which...
As authoritarian leaders rise to power, they require the backing of a group of well-connected, well-...
This article examines how authoritarian parties and legislatures affect regime survival. While autho...
A large proportion of coup attempts in autocracies occur in the aftermath of elections, yet little s...
Political leaders face threats to their power from both within and outside the regime. Leaders can b...
This article provides an explanation for the significant variation in coups in autocracies. The exis...
This article provides an explanation for the significant variation in coups in autocracies. The exis...
Why do autocrats allow legislatures, parties and elections? These nominally democratic in- stitution...
Why do some leaders eliminate rivals from authoritarian regimes and therefore diminish elites' capab...
Current explanations of coup activity focus on the regime factors that makes them more likely to be ...
Under what conditions do political leaders take strategies that allow them to reduce militaries' cap...
In contrast to the conventional wisdom that democratization reduces coups, 46% of coups targeted dem...
Theoretical models on autocracies have long grappled with how to characterize and analyze state spon...
All autocrats rely on inner-circle elites to stay in power. It is commonly assumed that dictators wi...
A large proportion of coup attempts in autocracies occur in the aftermath of elections, yet little s...
Literature on coup-proofing often suggests that such activities reduce military effectiveness, which...
As authoritarian leaders rise to power, they require the backing of a group of well-connected, well-...
This article examines how authoritarian parties and legislatures affect regime survival. While autho...
A large proportion of coup attempts in autocracies occur in the aftermath of elections, yet little s...
Political leaders face threats to their power from both within and outside the regime. Leaders can b...