Parties rely on brokers to win elections in much of the developing world. How do parties use compensation to motivate these grassroots agents? Parties often decentralize broker payment decisions to local party elites. In addition to helping their party win elections, local elites seek personal career advancement. Because local elites typically rely on brokers’ support to advance, they have an incentive to use payments to strengthen their ties to brokers. Using a multiwave survey, we track the full range of payments to over 1,000 brokers from Ghana’s ruling party—the party most capable of distributing patronage benefits—across an electoral cycle. We show that the party operates a hybrid payment system missed by previous studies. The party re...
Formal models of political clientelism tend to focus on vote buying, the exchange of cash and goods ...
Formal models of political clientelism tend to focus on vote buying, the exchange of cash and goods ...
Why does electoral clientelism persist when ballots are secret and elections are competitive? The pr...
Parties rely on brokers to win elections in much of the developing world. How do parties use compens...
Parties rely on brokers to win elections in much of the developing world. How do parties use compens...
Parties rely on brokers to win elections in much of the developing world. How do parties use compens...
Seminal models of clientelism assert that parties value brokers for their strong downward ties to vo...
Seminal models of clientelism assert that parties value brokers for their strong downward ties to vo...
Seminal models of clientelism assert that parties value brokers for their strong downward ties to vo...
Seminal models of clientelism assert that parties value brokers for their strong downward ties to vo...
Abstract. In many developing democracies local party brokers distribute mate-rial benefits to voters...
Political parties in sub‐Saharan Africa's developing democracies are often considered to lack suffic...
Political parties in sub‐Saharan Africa's developing democracies are often considered to lack suffic...
Party switching among legislative candidates has important implications for accountability and repre...
This article shows that the disloyalty of political brokers causes party fragility. Lacking distinct...
Formal models of political clientelism tend to focus on vote buying, the exchange of cash and goods ...
Formal models of political clientelism tend to focus on vote buying, the exchange of cash and goods ...
Why does electoral clientelism persist when ballots are secret and elections are competitive? The pr...
Parties rely on brokers to win elections in much of the developing world. How do parties use compens...
Parties rely on brokers to win elections in much of the developing world. How do parties use compens...
Parties rely on brokers to win elections in much of the developing world. How do parties use compens...
Seminal models of clientelism assert that parties value brokers for their strong downward ties to vo...
Seminal models of clientelism assert that parties value brokers for their strong downward ties to vo...
Seminal models of clientelism assert that parties value brokers for their strong downward ties to vo...
Seminal models of clientelism assert that parties value brokers for their strong downward ties to vo...
Abstract. In many developing democracies local party brokers distribute mate-rial benefits to voters...
Political parties in sub‐Saharan Africa's developing democracies are often considered to lack suffic...
Political parties in sub‐Saharan Africa's developing democracies are often considered to lack suffic...
Party switching among legislative candidates has important implications for accountability and repre...
This article shows that the disloyalty of political brokers causes party fragility. Lacking distinct...
Formal models of political clientelism tend to focus on vote buying, the exchange of cash and goods ...
Formal models of political clientelism tend to focus on vote buying, the exchange of cash and goods ...
Why does electoral clientelism persist when ballots are secret and elections are competitive? The pr...