This paper challenges the conventional wisdom that giving voters more power – both formally through the use of more “open” electoral systems and informally through easier access to information on politicians’ wrongdoings – will necessarily result in them voting corrupt politicians out of office. Focusing on a comparison between closed-list and open-list proportional representation systems, we theoretically show that opening the lists is likely to generate a large shift of vote shares in favor of the incumbent parties, which in many countries happen to be the most corrupt. We design a survey experiment to test these predictions in Paraguay and find strong supporting evidence. We do not find in our context that the lack of information is a ma...
What keeps corruption in check? Politicians have incentives to both avoid and actively oppose corrup...
This dissertation seeks to examine why democratic systems and electoral competition can sometimes fa...
Political institutions can affect corruption. We use audit reports from an anti-corruption program i...
This paper challenges the conventional wisdom that giving voters more power both formally through th...
Corruption cases have limited electoral consequences in many countries. Why do voters often fail to ...
Governments, civil society organizations, and scholars spend considerable resources implementing and...
This paper contributes to the literature on the explanations for the often observed phenomenon of t...
A large volume of literature shows that corruption affects economic growth through the lowering of t...
Under what conditions do voters hold leaders accountable for corruption? This dissertation argues th...
Are voters’ attitudes towards corrupt candidates affected by the details they learn about candidates...
How do voters respond to information about political corruption? Prior research provides conflicting...
The coexistence of harsh disapproval of corruption and the limited electoral consequences of malfeas...
In this paper, we study whether voters are more likely to "vote out" a corrupt incumbent than to re-...
In this paper, we address the question of why voters tolerate corrupt politicians. Standard economic...
This paper investigates how different electoral rules influence political corruption. We argue that ...
What keeps corruption in check? Politicians have incentives to both avoid and actively oppose corrup...
This dissertation seeks to examine why democratic systems and electoral competition can sometimes fa...
Political institutions can affect corruption. We use audit reports from an anti-corruption program i...
This paper challenges the conventional wisdom that giving voters more power both formally through th...
Corruption cases have limited electoral consequences in many countries. Why do voters often fail to ...
Governments, civil society organizations, and scholars spend considerable resources implementing and...
This paper contributes to the literature on the explanations for the often observed phenomenon of t...
A large volume of literature shows that corruption affects economic growth through the lowering of t...
Under what conditions do voters hold leaders accountable for corruption? This dissertation argues th...
Are voters’ attitudes towards corrupt candidates affected by the details they learn about candidates...
How do voters respond to information about political corruption? Prior research provides conflicting...
The coexistence of harsh disapproval of corruption and the limited electoral consequences of malfeas...
In this paper, we study whether voters are more likely to "vote out" a corrupt incumbent than to re-...
In this paper, we address the question of why voters tolerate corrupt politicians. Standard economic...
This paper investigates how different electoral rules influence political corruption. We argue that ...
What keeps corruption in check? Politicians have incentives to both avoid and actively oppose corrup...
This dissertation seeks to examine why democratic systems and electoral competition can sometimes fa...
Political institutions can affect corruption. We use audit reports from an anti-corruption program i...