Studies of multiparty elections in authoritarian regimes have proliferated in recent years. Nevertheless, the available evidence remains inconclusive in terms of when, where, or why elections work to sustain or undermine authoritarian rule. The contributions to the special issue “State Capacity, Elections and the Resilience of Authoritarian Rule” argue that analyzing the extent to which the effect of elections on authoritarian regime resilience is mediated through the factor of state capacity helps to solve this puzzle. This introduction lays the analytical foundation for this discussion by reviewing key terms and concepts, and by highlighting possible theoretical connections between the state capacity literature on the one hand and the ele...
Do elections reduce or increase the risk of autocratic regime breakdown? This article addresses this...
How does experience with nominally democratic electoral institutions shape the politics and stabilit...
While it is clear that contemporary authoritarian incumbents use democratic emulation as a strategy ...
Under what conditions do elections lead to democratization or conversely, sustain authoritarianism? ...
Under what conditions do elections lead to democratization or, conversely, sustain authoritarianism?...
Research has highlighted the role of the state in sustaining authoritarian regimes. But how does sta...
Scholarship on electoral authoritarianism has increasingly recognized state capacity as an element e...
Scholarship on electoral authoritarianism has increasingly recognized state capacity as an element e...
Scholarship on electoral authoritarianism has increasingly recognized state capacity as an element e...
Scholarship on electoral authoritarianism has increasingly recognized state capacity as an element e...
Abstract: Authoritarian regimes adopt nominally democratic institutions despite the inherent uncert...
Abstract: Authoritarian regimes adopt nominally democratic institutions despite the inherent uncert...
When do elections in authoritarian regimes lead to democracy? Building from the distinction between ...
This article examines how authoritarian parties and legislatures affect regime survival. While autho...
<p>Chapter 1: Forcing Consent: Information and Power in Non-Democratic Elections. Why do governments...
Do elections reduce or increase the risk of autocratic regime breakdown? This article addresses this...
How does experience with nominally democratic electoral institutions shape the politics and stabilit...
While it is clear that contemporary authoritarian incumbents use democratic emulation as a strategy ...
Under what conditions do elections lead to democratization or conversely, sustain authoritarianism? ...
Under what conditions do elections lead to democratization or, conversely, sustain authoritarianism?...
Research has highlighted the role of the state in sustaining authoritarian regimes. But how does sta...
Scholarship on electoral authoritarianism has increasingly recognized state capacity as an element e...
Scholarship on electoral authoritarianism has increasingly recognized state capacity as an element e...
Scholarship on electoral authoritarianism has increasingly recognized state capacity as an element e...
Scholarship on electoral authoritarianism has increasingly recognized state capacity as an element e...
Abstract: Authoritarian regimes adopt nominally democratic institutions despite the inherent uncert...
Abstract: Authoritarian regimes adopt nominally democratic institutions despite the inherent uncert...
When do elections in authoritarian regimes lead to democracy? Building from the distinction between ...
This article examines how authoritarian parties and legislatures affect regime survival. While autho...
<p>Chapter 1: Forcing Consent: Information and Power in Non-Democratic Elections. Why do governments...
Do elections reduce or increase the risk of autocratic regime breakdown? This article addresses this...
How does experience with nominally democratic electoral institutions shape the politics and stabilit...
While it is clear that contemporary authoritarian incumbents use democratic emulation as a strategy ...