This article explains the varieties of clientelistic vote exchange in contemporary electoral democracies. It distinguishes two commonly recognized modes of exchange according to their capacity to overcome the problem of opportunism–relational clientelism and spot-market “vote buying” clientelism–and relates them to attributes along which clientelistic varieties have been distinguished. It develops a metric of clientelistic profile differences that characterize parties’ choices of clientelistic strategies and advances hypotheses about the conditions under which parties pursue different strategies. Drawing on an 88 country/506 party expert survey of clientelistic practices, more relational politics thrives in middle-income countries with simu...
In this dissertation, I investigate some of the theoretical and empirical puzzles posed by the persi...
The central argument of this dissertation is relatively counterintuitive: increases in income do not...
Electoral volatility and clientelism were traditionally analysed through the lenses of clientelistic...
This article explains the varieties of clientelistic vote exchange in contemporary electoral democra...
Clientelistic vote mobilization is a prominent electoral strategy in many of the world’s democracie...
Contemporary political parties often use state resources to win elections. In this context, electora...
The study examines the conditions, associated with political clientelism, as well as the ingredients...
While clientelism is most often viewed as a symptom of traditional politics, empirical evidence sugg...
How does electoral competition shape parties’ use of clientelist strategies during elections? In thi...
In many countries, clientelist parties (or political machines) distribute selective benefits, especi...
One major mark of a strong democracy is the use of policy-based rather than clientelist campaign str...
Mainstream political science literature on clientelism tends to focus on its supply side and on vote...
Political clientelism is a dyadic relation in which a politician (the patron) gives material goods a...
In electorally contested regimes, the incumbent party often uses clientelist exchanges to stay in po...
Abstract: This paper presents a new approach to the study of clientelism that parsimoniously explai...
In this dissertation, I investigate some of the theoretical and empirical puzzles posed by the persi...
The central argument of this dissertation is relatively counterintuitive: increases in income do not...
Electoral volatility and clientelism were traditionally analysed through the lenses of clientelistic...
This article explains the varieties of clientelistic vote exchange in contemporary electoral democra...
Clientelistic vote mobilization is a prominent electoral strategy in many of the world’s democracie...
Contemporary political parties often use state resources to win elections. In this context, electora...
The study examines the conditions, associated with political clientelism, as well as the ingredients...
While clientelism is most often viewed as a symptom of traditional politics, empirical evidence sugg...
How does electoral competition shape parties’ use of clientelist strategies during elections? In thi...
In many countries, clientelist parties (or political machines) distribute selective benefits, especi...
One major mark of a strong democracy is the use of policy-based rather than clientelist campaign str...
Mainstream political science literature on clientelism tends to focus on its supply side and on vote...
Political clientelism is a dyadic relation in which a politician (the patron) gives material goods a...
In electorally contested regimes, the incumbent party often uses clientelist exchanges to stay in po...
Abstract: This paper presents a new approach to the study of clientelism that parsimoniously explai...
In this dissertation, I investigate some of the theoretical and empirical puzzles posed by the persi...
The central argument of this dissertation is relatively counterintuitive: increases in income do not...
Electoral volatility and clientelism were traditionally analysed through the lenses of clientelistic...