Studies of clientelism typically assume that political machines distribute rewards to persuade or mobilize the existing electorate. We argue that rewards not only influence actions of the electorate, but can also shape its composition. Across the world, machines employ “voter buying” to import outsiders into their districts. Voter buying demonstrates how clientelism can underpin electoral fraud, and it offers an explanation of why machines deliver rewards when they cannot monitor vote choices. Our analyses suggest that voter buying dramatically influences municipal elections in Brazil. A regression discontinuity design suggests that voter audits—which undermined voter buying—decreased the electorate by 12 percentage points and reduced the l...
Although elections have become the norm not only in democratic regimes but also in autocratic ones, ...
Citizen assessment of government performance is a cornerstone of the successful functioning of democ...
How do political actors choose between different tactics of electoral manipulation, and how does the...
Studies of clientelism typically assume that political machines distribute rewards to persuade or mo...
In many countries, clientelist parties (or political machines) distribute selective benefits, especi...
Recent studies of clientelism predominantly focus on how elites use rewards to influence vote choice...
In this paper, we present a critical survey of experiments on political clientelism and vote-buying....
Most traditional theories of clientelism assert that parties in need of securing electoral support i...
Vote buying is a form of political clientelism involving pre-electoral transfers of money or materia...
Electoral fraud is often a problem for new democracies. I study the consequences of voter-buying, de...
In this dissertation, I investigate some of the theoretical and empirical puzzles posed by the persi...
Scholarship on clientelism typically defines the practice as the contingent exchange of goods and se...
textWhile clientelism has been intensively studied in comparative politics from very different theor...
Thesis (Ph. D.)--University of Rochester. Department of Political Science, 2014.In the developing wo...
Electoral volatility and clientelism were traditionally analysed through the lenses of clientelistic...
Although elections have become the norm not only in democratic regimes but also in autocratic ones, ...
Citizen assessment of government performance is a cornerstone of the successful functioning of democ...
How do political actors choose between different tactics of electoral manipulation, and how does the...
Studies of clientelism typically assume that political machines distribute rewards to persuade or mo...
In many countries, clientelist parties (or political machines) distribute selective benefits, especi...
Recent studies of clientelism predominantly focus on how elites use rewards to influence vote choice...
In this paper, we present a critical survey of experiments on political clientelism and vote-buying....
Most traditional theories of clientelism assert that parties in need of securing electoral support i...
Vote buying is a form of political clientelism involving pre-electoral transfers of money or materia...
Electoral fraud is often a problem for new democracies. I study the consequences of voter-buying, de...
In this dissertation, I investigate some of the theoretical and empirical puzzles posed by the persi...
Scholarship on clientelism typically defines the practice as the contingent exchange of goods and se...
textWhile clientelism has been intensively studied in comparative politics from very different theor...
Thesis (Ph. D.)--University of Rochester. Department of Political Science, 2014.In the developing wo...
Electoral volatility and clientelism were traditionally analysed through the lenses of clientelistic...
Although elections have become the norm not only in democratic regimes but also in autocratic ones, ...
Citizen assessment of government performance is a cornerstone of the successful functioning of democ...
How do political actors choose between different tactics of electoral manipulation, and how does the...