Democratic elections have been assumed to play a crucial role in curbing corruption among public officials. Voters, due to their general distaste for corruption, are expected to sanction politicians who misuse public office for private gains. Yet, empirical evidence to date is mixed, and it often suggests that the electoral punishment of corruption is rather mild. Recently, political scientists have made great strides in understanding why corruption might be tolerated by voters. In this review, we identify three key stages—information acquisition, blame attribution, and behavioral response—that underlie a retrospective vote based on corruption. A breakdown of one or more of these stages may lead to a lack of electoral punishment of corrupti...
The coexistence of harsh disapproval of corruption and the limited electoral consequences of malfeas...
Is corruption systematically related to electoral rules? A number of studies have tried to uncover e...
Past research has confirmed the importance of structural and individual-level factors in predicting ...
Democratic elections have been assumed to play a crucial role in curbing corruption among public of...
When do voters consider candidates for elected office to be corrupt? If corruption is strongly disfav...
In this paper, we study whether voters are more likely to "vote out" a corrupt incumbent than to re-...
Using cross-national panel data, Krause and Méndez recently studied whether voters retract support ...
Fighting corruption is a vital aspect of good governance. Yet, it is also a highly persistent phenom...
Existing literature has analysed the relationship between electoral systems and either corruption or...
The literature studying citizen responses to exposed political corruption is rapidly growing. While ...
How do voters respond to information about political corruption? Prior research provides conflicting...
A growing literature examines the effect of corruption on political behavior. However, little attent...
The electoral consequences of individual perceptions of corruption are an important component of pol...
The electoral consequences of individual perceptions of corruption are an important component of pol...
The vast majority of people across the globe lives in countries characterized by high levels of corr...
The coexistence of harsh disapproval of corruption and the limited electoral consequences of malfeas...
Is corruption systematically related to electoral rules? A number of studies have tried to uncover e...
Past research has confirmed the importance of structural and individual-level factors in predicting ...
Democratic elections have been assumed to play a crucial role in curbing corruption among public of...
When do voters consider candidates for elected office to be corrupt? If corruption is strongly disfav...
In this paper, we study whether voters are more likely to "vote out" a corrupt incumbent than to re-...
Using cross-national panel data, Krause and Méndez recently studied whether voters retract support ...
Fighting corruption is a vital aspect of good governance. Yet, it is also a highly persistent phenom...
Existing literature has analysed the relationship between electoral systems and either corruption or...
The literature studying citizen responses to exposed political corruption is rapidly growing. While ...
How do voters respond to information about political corruption? Prior research provides conflicting...
A growing literature examines the effect of corruption on political behavior. However, little attent...
The electoral consequences of individual perceptions of corruption are an important component of pol...
The electoral consequences of individual perceptions of corruption are an important component of pol...
The vast majority of people across the globe lives in countries characterized by high levels of corr...
The coexistence of harsh disapproval of corruption and the limited electoral consequences of malfeas...
Is corruption systematically related to electoral rules? A number of studies have tried to uncover e...
Past research has confirmed the importance of structural and individual-level factors in predicting ...