Electoral observation missions (EOM) are designed to promote improvements in democratic quality by overseeing elections, but how successful are they? We argue that EOM tie the hands of incumbents, who have to adjust their electoral misconduct strategies, thus opening up political competition and making it more likely that the opposition will do well. Moreover, we propose that monitoring effects are conditioned by regime type, expecting that EOM presence has a stronger impact on electoral competition in autocracies than in democracies. Using a dataset of 580 parliamentary and presidential elections in 108 countries between 1976 and 2009 we find support for our theoretical claims. EOM increase electoral competitiveness in dictatorships by red...
A large proportion of coup attempts in autocracies occur in the aftermath of elections, yet little s...
Why did election monitoring become an international norm? Why do pseudo-democrats—undemocratic leade...
A large proportion of coup attempts in autocracies occur in the aftermath of elections, yet little s...
Electoral observation missions (EOM) are designed to promote improvements in democratic quality by o...
When do elections in authoritarian regimes lead to democracy? Building from the distinction between ...
Elections in nondemocratic settings are expected to play a regime sustaining role and a regime subve...
Until 1962, there were no recorded cases of international election observation in sovereign states. ...
How do sanctions affect incumbent electoral performance during elections? Although existing literatu...
Election observation - the deployment of trained personnel to monitor the compliance of political pa...
How, if at all, do nondemocratic elections affect credible signaling in international crises? While ...
An increasing number of international organizations are engaged in the monitoring of elections in un...
Do elections reduce or increase the risk of autocratic regime breakdown? This article addresses this...
A large proportion of coup attempts in autocracies occur in the aftermath of elections, yet little s...
Electoral fraud is a common problem in young democracies. Election observers constitute one possibl...
This chapter examines how regimes respond strategically to election monitoring. In particular, it ar...
A large proportion of coup attempts in autocracies occur in the aftermath of elections, yet little s...
Why did election monitoring become an international norm? Why do pseudo-democrats—undemocratic leade...
A large proportion of coup attempts in autocracies occur in the aftermath of elections, yet little s...
Electoral observation missions (EOM) are designed to promote improvements in democratic quality by o...
When do elections in authoritarian regimes lead to democracy? Building from the distinction between ...
Elections in nondemocratic settings are expected to play a regime sustaining role and a regime subve...
Until 1962, there were no recorded cases of international election observation in sovereign states. ...
How do sanctions affect incumbent electoral performance during elections? Although existing literatu...
Election observation - the deployment of trained personnel to monitor the compliance of political pa...
How, if at all, do nondemocratic elections affect credible signaling in international crises? While ...
An increasing number of international organizations are engaged in the monitoring of elections in un...
Do elections reduce or increase the risk of autocratic regime breakdown? This article addresses this...
A large proportion of coup attempts in autocracies occur in the aftermath of elections, yet little s...
Electoral fraud is a common problem in young democracies. Election observers constitute one possibl...
This chapter examines how regimes respond strategically to election monitoring. In particular, it ar...
A large proportion of coup attempts in autocracies occur in the aftermath of elections, yet little s...
Why did election monitoring become an international norm? Why do pseudo-democrats—undemocratic leade...
A large proportion of coup attempts in autocracies occur in the aftermath of elections, yet little s...