Authoritarian incumbents in democratizing countries choose electoral rules to retain power while accommodating opposition demands for increased participation and representation. We clarify the political logic of this institutional choice and its consequences in Senegal by employing a ‘whole system’ approach that emphasizes the intricate but often hidden relationships between elections and the rules governing them at multiple levels — presidential, legislative and local. Success at one level depends on performance at all levels. In the short run, multiple-level electoral reforms preserve the ruling party in power while expanding opportunities for, but also fragmenting, the opposition. In the long run, they encourage splits within the ruling ...
What kinds of electoral systems can help democracy survive in countries split by deep cleavages of r...
Any analysis of elections in Africa over recent periods has to be placed within the wider debate abo...
As the “Short Twentieth Century” came to an end, more and more democracies seriously considered the ...
Most authoritarian elections are non-competitive affairs, manipulated by state actors to guarantee s...
The paper is devoted to the role of the head of state in initiating and implementing constitutional ...
Le principe de l’alternance démocratique au pouvoir fait généralement défaut en Afrique. Cette étape...
Constitutions and other legal frameworks are expected to ensure the protection of the fundamental an...
As counter intuitive as it might sound, autocracy without elections is a rare combination today. Ele...
This paper presents a comparative case study of party system institutionalization in Ghana and Seneg...
Political leadership in Africa is changing. Evidence of this can be found in the Arab Spring, democr...
The existentialist philosopher, Jean Paul Sartre, defines conflict amongst the living as informed by...
It is not easy to understand why some African party systems manage to stabilise while others remain ...
This book shows that democratization in sub-Saharan Africa can be successful, even if the government...
As many scholars have noted, electoral systems exert a powerful influence on the process of democrat...
This book is about elections and democracy in newly democratizing countries. Building on a new data ...
What kinds of electoral systems can help democracy survive in countries split by deep cleavages of r...
Any analysis of elections in Africa over recent periods has to be placed within the wider debate abo...
As the “Short Twentieth Century” came to an end, more and more democracies seriously considered the ...
Most authoritarian elections are non-competitive affairs, manipulated by state actors to guarantee s...
The paper is devoted to the role of the head of state in initiating and implementing constitutional ...
Le principe de l’alternance démocratique au pouvoir fait généralement défaut en Afrique. Cette étape...
Constitutions and other legal frameworks are expected to ensure the protection of the fundamental an...
As counter intuitive as it might sound, autocracy without elections is a rare combination today. Ele...
This paper presents a comparative case study of party system institutionalization in Ghana and Seneg...
Political leadership in Africa is changing. Evidence of this can be found in the Arab Spring, democr...
The existentialist philosopher, Jean Paul Sartre, defines conflict amongst the living as informed by...
It is not easy to understand why some African party systems manage to stabilise while others remain ...
This book shows that democratization in sub-Saharan Africa can be successful, even if the government...
As many scholars have noted, electoral systems exert a powerful influence on the process of democrat...
This book is about elections and democracy in newly democratizing countries. Building on a new data ...
What kinds of electoral systems can help democracy survive in countries split by deep cleavages of r...
Any analysis of elections in Africa over recent periods has to be placed within the wider debate abo...
As the “Short Twentieth Century” came to an end, more and more democracies seriously considered the ...