Elections in nondemocratic settings are expected to play a regime sustaining role and a regime subverting role. Recent research finds that these two seemingly competing views are not mutually exclusive, but rather complementary with each other. This is the case because the regime subverting role of elections is at work in the short run, whereas the regime sustaining role operates in the long term. In this paper, I argue that these effects are conditional on the nature of competition in those elections. Specifically, I contend that these effects that derive from the informational role of elections do not emerge when opposition forces boycott the elections. Using data on 262 nondemocratic regimes in 116 countries from 1946 to 2007, I provide ...
Abstract: Authoritarian regimes adopt nominally democratic institutions despite the inherent uncert...
The view that multiparty elections in changing authoritarian regimes should be held sooner rather th...
The last part of 20th century saw the collapse of a dramatic number of dictatorships. Rather than de...
How do elections and the economy affect authoritarian survival? Distinguishing between (a) non-elect...
When do elections in authoritarian regimes lead to democracy? Building from the distinction between ...
Do elections reduce or increase the risk of autocratic regime breakdown? This article addresses this...
How, if at all, do nondemocratic elections affect credible signaling in international crises? While ...
Many regimes, particularly autocracies, hold elections where the ruling regime’s victory is a forego...
Electoral observation missions (EOM) are designed to promote improvements in democratic quality by o...
There has recently been an increased interest among academic scholars on the importance of elections...
The concept of electoral competition is relevant to a variety of research agendas in political scien...
This article describes a new data set that covers the electoral institutions used in all of the demo...
<p>Chapter 1: Forcing Consent: Information and Power in Non-Democratic Elections. Why do governments...
How does experience with nominally democratic electoral institutions shape the politics and stabilit...
without Opposition The literature on authoritarian institutions points to nationwide elections as a ...
Abstract: Authoritarian regimes adopt nominally democratic institutions despite the inherent uncert...
The view that multiparty elections in changing authoritarian regimes should be held sooner rather th...
The last part of 20th century saw the collapse of a dramatic number of dictatorships. Rather than de...
How do elections and the economy affect authoritarian survival? Distinguishing between (a) non-elect...
When do elections in authoritarian regimes lead to democracy? Building from the distinction between ...
Do elections reduce or increase the risk of autocratic regime breakdown? This article addresses this...
How, if at all, do nondemocratic elections affect credible signaling in international crises? While ...
Many regimes, particularly autocracies, hold elections where the ruling regime’s victory is a forego...
Electoral observation missions (EOM) are designed to promote improvements in democratic quality by o...
There has recently been an increased interest among academic scholars on the importance of elections...
The concept of electoral competition is relevant to a variety of research agendas in political scien...
This article describes a new data set that covers the electoral institutions used in all of the demo...
<p>Chapter 1: Forcing Consent: Information and Power in Non-Democratic Elections. Why do governments...
How does experience with nominally democratic electoral institutions shape the politics and stabilit...
without Opposition The literature on authoritarian institutions points to nationwide elections as a ...
Abstract: Authoritarian regimes adopt nominally democratic institutions despite the inherent uncert...
The view that multiparty elections in changing authoritarian regimes should be held sooner rather th...
The last part of 20th century saw the collapse of a dramatic number of dictatorships. Rather than de...