Are slum dwellers more involved in clientelistic arrangements than other (urban poor) voters? While poverty is a key predictor of clientelism, some urban poor voters are more involved in clientelistic arrangements than others. Insecure tenure, lack of access to public resources, and location in areas exposed to environmental shocks increase the vulnerability of slum dwellers. This vulnerability is used by politicians and brokers, who politicize access to scarce resources, and thus make slum dweller more exposed to clientelism. The qualitative literature has long highlighted how clientelism provides a strategy for slum dwellers to cope with their vulnerability, but this population is often excluded from quantitative analyses of clientelism. ...
Why do some poor people engage in clientelism whereas others do not? Why does clientelism sometimes ...
Do parties target individuals or groups? Although this question is fundamental to understanding clie...
We investigate middle-class poverty politics in Seattle and Buenos Aires in a period of recovery fro...
It is commonly observed that clientelist parties (ones that trade individual material rewards for vo...
Does electoral democracy improve public goods provision for the poor? This paper considers whether a...
This study argues that economic vulnerability causes citizens to participate in clientelism, a pheno...
In many countries, clientelist parties (or political machines) distribute selective benefits, especi...
The terms on which citizens of emerging democracies access public resources are often skewed by thei...
Through the in-depth ethnographic study of one squatter neighborhood in Montevideo and its leader's ...
The rapid process of urbanization currently swelling the poor urban neighborhoods of developing coun...
This dissertation examines the relationship between the process of residential segregation, the soci...
Political clientelism is a dyadic relation in which a politician (the patron) gives material goods a...
Conditional cash transfer programs (CCTs) allow poor households and individuals access to income sup...
Why do some poor people engage in clientelism whereas others do not? Why does clientelism sometimes ...
Thesis for the Degree of Master in Public PolicyThe high level of informality of slum dwellers puts ...
Why do some poor people engage in clientelism whereas others do not? Why does clientelism sometimes ...
Do parties target individuals or groups? Although this question is fundamental to understanding clie...
We investigate middle-class poverty politics in Seattle and Buenos Aires in a period of recovery fro...
It is commonly observed that clientelist parties (ones that trade individual material rewards for vo...
Does electoral democracy improve public goods provision for the poor? This paper considers whether a...
This study argues that economic vulnerability causes citizens to participate in clientelism, a pheno...
In many countries, clientelist parties (or political machines) distribute selective benefits, especi...
The terms on which citizens of emerging democracies access public resources are often skewed by thei...
Through the in-depth ethnographic study of one squatter neighborhood in Montevideo and its leader's ...
The rapid process of urbanization currently swelling the poor urban neighborhoods of developing coun...
This dissertation examines the relationship between the process of residential segregation, the soci...
Political clientelism is a dyadic relation in which a politician (the patron) gives material goods a...
Conditional cash transfer programs (CCTs) allow poor households and individuals access to income sup...
Why do some poor people engage in clientelism whereas others do not? Why does clientelism sometimes ...
Thesis for the Degree of Master in Public PolicyThe high level of informality of slum dwellers puts ...
Why do some poor people engage in clientelism whereas others do not? Why does clientelism sometimes ...
Do parties target individuals or groups? Although this question is fundamental to understanding clie...
We investigate middle-class poverty politics in Seattle and Buenos Aires in a period of recovery fro...