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Group Ties amid Industrial Change: Historical Evidence from the Fossil Fuel Industry World Politics (IF 4.5) Pub Date : 2022-09-02 Noah Zucker
Coethnics often work in the same industries. How does this ethnic clustering affect individuals’ political loyalties amid industrial growth and decline? Focusing on migrant groups, the author contends that ethnic groups’ distribution across industries alters the political allegiances of their members. When a group is concentrated in a growing industry, economic optimism and resources flow between coethnics
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Imagining a World without the Universal Declaration of Human Rights World Politics (IF 4.5) Pub Date : 2022-07-12 Zachary Elkins, Tom Ginsburg
The Universal Declaration of Human Rights (UDHR) is thought to have shaped constitutions profoundly since its adoption in 1948. The authors identify two empirical implications that should follow from such influence. First, UDHR content should be reflected in subsequent national constitutions. Second, such reflections should bear the particular marks of the UDHR itself, not those of the postwar zeitgeist
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Political Competition and Authoritarian Repression: Evidence from Pinochet's Chile World Politics (IF 4.5) Pub Date : 2022-06-29 Pearce Edwards
Authoritarian regimes repress to prevent mass resistance to their rule. In doing so, regimes’ security forces require information about the dissidents who mobilize such resistance. Political competition, which fuels partisan rivalries, offers one solution to this problem by motivating civilians to provide needed information to security forces. Yet civilians share information about any political opponents
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Never Again: The Holocaust and Political Legacies of Genocide World Politics (IF 4.5) Pub Date : 2022-06-24 Carly Wayne, Yuri M. Zhukov
Do individuals previously targeted by genocide become more supportive of other victimized groups? How are these political lessons internalized and passed down across generations? To answer these questions, the authors leverage original survey data collected among Holocaust survivors in the United States and their descendants, Jews with no immediate family connection to the Holocaust, and non-Jewish
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The Long-Run Consequences of The Opium Concessions for Out-Group Animosity on Java World Politics (IF 4.5) Pub Date : 2022-05-25 Nicholas Kuipers
This article examines the consequences of the opium concession system in the Dutch East Indies—a nineteenth-century institution through which the Dutch would auction the monopolistic right to sell opium in a given locality. The winners of these auctions were invariably ethnic Chinese. The poverty of Java's indigenous population combined with opium's addictive properties meant that many individuals
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Preferences Over Foreign Migration: Testing Existing Explanations in the Gulf World Politics (IF 4.5) Pub Date : 2022-05-25 Erin A. York
Do existing theories regarding the impact of foreign migration explain preferences in non-oecd countries? The author adapts and applies explanations for opposition to migration in the Arabian Gulf, a significant region in global migration today, using a survey experiment implemented in Qatar. The results offer a rare validation of predictions from the labor market competition model, demonstrating that
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Foreign Occupation and Support for International Cooperation: Evidence from Denmark World Politics (IF 4.5) Pub Date : 2022-04-21 Lasse Aaskoven
A growing literature investigates how historical state repression affects later political outcomes, but little attention has been given to whether violence during foreign occupation affects support for international cooperation. This article investigates this issue by analyzing the 1972 Danish referendum on membership in the European Economic Community (eec)—an organization seen at the time as being
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Public Opinion on Geopolitics and Trade: Theory and Evidence World Politics (IF 4.5) Pub Date : 2022-04-11 Allison Carnegie, Nikhar Gaikwad
This article provides a systematic examination of the role of security considerations in shaping mass preferences over international economic exchange. The authors employ multiple survey experiments conducted in the United States and India, along with observational and case study evidence, to investigate how geopolitics affects voters’ views of international trade. Their research shows that respondents
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When Coethnicity Fails World Politics (IF 4.5) Pub Date : 2022-02-14 Giuliana Pardelli, Alexander Kustov
Why do communities with larger shares of ethnic and racial minorities have worse public goods provision? Many studies have emphasized the role of diversity in hindering public outcomes, but the question of causality remains elusive. The authors contribute to this debate by tracing the roots of both contemporary racial demography and public goods provision to the uneven historical expansion of the state
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Expressive Power of Anti-Violence Legislation: Changes in Social Norms on Violence Against Women in Mexico World Politics (IF 4.5) Pub Date : 2022-01-10 Mala Htun, Francesca R. Jensenius
We know more about why laws on violence against women (vaw) were adopted than about how much and in what ways these laws affect society. The authors argue that even weakly enforced laws can contribute to positive social change. They theorize the expressive power of vaw legislation, and present evidence for a cautiously optimistic assessment of current trends on violence against women and the ways that
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Buying Brokers: Electoral Handouts beyond Clientelism in a Weak-Party State World Politics (IF 4.5) Pub Date : 2022-02-04 Allen Hicken, Edward Aspinall, Meredith L. Weiss, Burhanuddin Muhtadi
Studies of electoral clientelism—the contingent exchange of material benefits for electoral support—frequently presume the presence of strong parties. Parties facilitate monitoring and enforcement of vote buying and allow brokers to identify core voters for turnout buying. Where money fuels campaigns but elections center around candidates, not parties, how do candidates pitch electoral handouts? The
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Government Policies, New Voter Coalitions, and the Emergence of Ethnic Dimension in Party Systems World Politics (IF 4.5) Pub Date : 2022-02-04 Maayan Mor
Conventional theories of ethnic politics argue that political entrepreneurs form ethnic parties where there is ethnic diversity. Yet empirical research finds that diversity is a weak predictor for the success of ethnic parties. When does ethnicity become a major element of party competition? Scholars have explained the emergence of an ethnic dimension in party systems as the result of institutions
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Control, Coercion, and Cooptation World Politics (IF 4.5) Pub Date : 2021-12-22 Shelley X. Liu
This article examines how rebels govern after winning a civil war. During war, both sides—rebels and their rivals—form ties with civilians to facilitate governance and to establish control. To consolidate power after war, the new rebel government engages in control through its ties in its wartime strongholds, through coercion in rival strongholds where rivals retain ties, and through cooptation by
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Geographically Targeted Spending in Mixed-Member Majoritarian Electoral Systems World Politics (IF 4.5) Pub Date : 2021-09-01 Amy Catalinac, Lucia Motolinia
Can governments elected under mixed-member majoritarian (mmm) electoral systems use geographically targeted spending to increase their chances of staying in office, and if so, how? Although twenty-eight countries use mmm electoral systems, scant research has addressed this question. The authors explain how mmm’s combination of electoral systems in two unlinked tiers creates a distinct strategic environment
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Justice as Checks and Balances World Politics (IF 4.5) Pub Date : 2021-09-01 Edgar Franco-Vivanco
The centralization of conflict resolution and the administration of justice, two crucial elements of state formation, are often ignored by the state-building literature. This article studies the monopolization of justice administration, using the historical example of the General Indian Court (gic) of colonial Mexico. The author argues that this court’s development and decision-making process can show
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The Generational and Institutional Sources of the Global Decline in Voter Turnout World Politics (IF 4.5) Pub Date : 2021-08-31 Filip Kostelka, André Blais
Why has voter turnout declined in democracies all over the world? This article draws on findings from microlevel studies and theorizes two explanations: generational change and a rise in the number of elective institutions. The empirical section tests these hypotheses along with other explanations proposed in the literature—shifts in party/candidate competition, voting-age reform, weakening group mobilization
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The Partial Effectiveness of Indoctrination in Autocracies World Politics (IF 4.5) Pub Date : 2021-08-31 Alexander de Juan, Felix Haass, Jan Pierskalla
Dictators depend on a committed bureaucracy to implement their policy preferences. But how do they induce loyalty and effort within their civil service? The authors study indoctrination through forced military service as a cost-effective strategy for achieving this goal. Conscription allows the regime to expose recruits, including future civil servants, to intense “political training” in a controlled
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Technological Change and the International System World Politics (IF 4.5) Pub Date : 2021-07-05 Helen V. Milner, Sondre Ulvund Solstad
Do world politics affect the adoption of new technology? States overwhelmingly rely on technology invented abroad, and their differential intensity of technology use accounts for many of their differences in economic development. Much of the literature on technology adoption focuses on domestic conditions. The authors argue instead that the structure of the international system is critical because
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Race, Resources, and Representation: Evidence from Brazilian Politicians—CORRIGENDUM World Politics (IF 4.5) Pub Date : 2021-07-01 Natália S. Bueno,Thad Dunning
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Social Revolution and Authoritarian Durability—ERRATUM World Politics (IF 4.5) Pub Date : 2021-07-01 Jean Lachapelle,Steven Levitsky,Lucan A. Way,Adam E. Casey
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Economic Risk within the Household and Voting for the Radical Right World Politics (IF 4.5) Pub Date : 2021-06-09 Tarik Abou-Chadi, Thomas Kurer
This article investigates how unemployment risk within households affects voting for the radical right. The authors contribute to recent advances in the literature that have highlighted the role of economic threat for understanding the support of radical-right parties. In contrast to existing work, the authors do not treat voters as atomistic individuals; they instead investigate households as a crucial
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The Impact of Political Apologies on Public Opinion World Politics (IF 4.5) Pub Date : 2021-06-09 Risa Kitagawa, Jonathan A. Chu
Apology diplomacy promises to assuage historical grievances held by foreign publics, yet in practice appears to ignite domestic backlash, raising questions about its efficacy. This article develops a theory of how political apologies affect public approval of an apologizing government across domestic and foreign contexts. The authors test its implications using large-scale survey experiments in Japan
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Pandemics and Political Development World Politics (IF 4.5) Pub Date : 2021-06-08 Daniel W. Gingerich, Jan P. Vogler
Do pandemics have lasting consequences for political behavior? The authors address this question by examining the consequences of the deadliest pandemic of the last millennium: the Black Death (1347–1351). They claim that pandemics can influence politics in the long run if the loss of life is high enough to increase the price of labor relative to other factors of production. When this occurs, labor-repressive
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Social Democratic Party Exceptionalism and Transnational Policy Linkages World Politics (IF 4.5) Pub Date : 2021-06-07 Petra Schleiter, Tobias Böhmelt, Lawrence Ezrow, Roni Lehrer
Political parties learn from foreign incumbents, that is, parties abroad that won office. But does the scope of this cross-national policy diffusion vary with the party family that generates those incumbents? The authors argue that party family conditions transnational policy learning when it makes information on the positions of sister parties more readily available and relevant. Both conditions apply
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Tweeting Beyond Tahrir World Politics (IF 4.5) Pub Date : 2021-03-26 Alexandra A. Siegel, Jonathan Nagler, Richard Bonneau, Joshua A. Tucker
abstractDo online social networks affect political tolerance in the highly polarized climate of postcoup Egypt? Taking advantage of the real-time networked structure of Twitter data, the authors find that not only is greater network diversity associated with lower levels of intolerance, but also that longer exposure to a diverse network is linked to less expression of intolerance over time. The authors
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Electoral Manipulation and Regime Support World Politics (IF 4.5) Pub Date : 2021-03-12 Ora John Reuter, David Szakonyi
Does electoral fraud stabilize authoritarian rule or undermine it? The answer to this question rests in part on how voters evaluate regime candidates who engage in fraud. Using a survey experiment conducted after the 2016 elections in Russia, the authors find that voters withdraw their support from ruling party candidates who commit electoral fraud. This effect is especially large among strong supporters
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The Status of Status in World Politics World Politics (IF 4.5) Pub Date : 2021-03-12 Paul K. MacDonald, Joseph M. Parent
What is status? How does it work? What effects does it tend to have? A new wave of scholarship on status in international relations has converged on a central definition of status, several causal pathways, and the claim that the pursuit of status tends to produce conflict. The authors take stock of the status literature and argue that this convergence is not only a sign of progress, but also an obstacle
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Redefining the Debate Over Reputation and Credibility in International Security World Politics (IF 4.5) Pub Date : 2020-12-11 Robert Jervis, Keren Yarhi-Milo, Don Casler
A wave of recent scholarship has breathed new life into the study of reputation and credibility in international politics. In this review article, the authors welcome this development while offering a framework for evaluating collective progress, a series of related critiques, and a set of suggestions for future research. The article details how the books under review represent an important step toward
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The Structure of Religion, Ethnicity, and Insurgent Mobilization World Politics (IF 4.5) Pub Date : 2020-12-10 Anoop Sarbahi
This article problematizes the social structure of ethnic groups to account for variation in insurgent mobilization within and across ethnic groups. Relying on network-based approaches to social structure, it argues that insurgent mobilization is constrained by the structural connectivity of the ethnic group, a measure of the extent to which subethnic communities—neighborhoods, villages, clans, and
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Practical Ideology in Militant Organizations World Politics (IF 4.5) Pub Date : 2020-12-07 Sarah E. Parkinson
Ideology shapes militant recruitment, organization, and conflict behavior. Existing research assumes doctrinal consistency, top-down socialization of adherents, and clear links between formal ideology and political action. But it has long been recognized that ideological commitments do not flow unaltered from overarching cleavages or elite narratives; they are uneven, contingent, fraught with tension
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Racial Reclassification and Political Identity Formation World Politics (IF 4.5) Pub Date : 2020-11-26 David De Micheli
This article leverages a phenomenon of racial reclassification in Brazil to shed new light on the processes of identity politicization. Conventional wisdom tells us that race mixture, fluid racial boundaries, and stigmatized blackness lead Brazilians to change their racial identifications—to reclassify—toward whiteness. But in recent years, Brazilians have demonstrated a newfound tendency to reclassify
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The Power of Compromise World Politics (IF 4.5) Pub Date : 2020-11-23 Ryan Brutger
In an era of increasingly public diplomacy, conventional wisdom assumes that leaders who compromise damage their reputations and lose the respect of their constituents, which undermines the prospects for international peace and cooperation. This article challenges this assumption and tests how leaders can negotiate compromises and avoid paying domestic approval and reputation costs. Drawing on theories
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The Popularity of Authoritarian Leaders World Politics (IF 4.5) Pub Date : 2020-09-23 Sergei Guriev, Daniel Treisman
How do citizens in authoritarian states feel about their leaders? While some dictators rule through terror, others seem genuinely popular. Using the Gallup World Poll’s panel of more than one hundred-forty countries in 2006–2016, the authors show that the drivers of political approval differ across regime types. Although brutal repression in overt dictatorships could cause respondents to falsify their
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The Political Geography of the Eurocrisis World Politics (IF 4.5) Pub Date : 2020-09-09 Pablo Beramendi, Daniel Stegmueller
The European Union provided a mixed response to the 2008 financial crisis. On the one hand, it refused to pursue fiscal integration through a common budget; on the other, it introduced significant transfers between countries that were designed to produce financial stabilization. The authors analyze this response as the outcome of democratic constraints on EU leaders. Given the EU’s current institutional
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The Logic of Vulnerability and Civilian Victimization World Politics (IF 4.5) Pub Date : 2020-09-07 Stefano Costalli, Francesco Niccolò Moro, Andrea Ruggeri
What causes civilian victimization in conventional civil wars and in conventional wars that experience insurgencies? The authors argue that a key driver of civilian victimization is the vulnerability of the incumbent forces, specifically when the conflict’s front line is shifting. Vulnerability is a function of informational and logistical challenges: when the front line is moving, incumbents face
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Institutional Sources of Business Power World Politics (IF 4.5) Pub Date : 2020-07-06 Marius R. Busemeyer, Kathleen Thelen
Recent years have seen a revival of debates about the role of business and the sources of business power in postindustrial political economies. Scholarly accounts commonly distinguish between structural sources of business power, connected to its privileged position in capitalist economies, and instrumental sources, related to direct forms of lobbying by business actors. The authors argue that this
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Networks, Informal Governance, and Ethnic Violence in a Syrian City World Politics (IF 4.5) Pub Date : 2020-06-11 Kevin Mazur
In cross-national studies, ethnic exclusion is robustly associated with the onset of violent challenge to incumbent regimes. But significant variation remains at the subnational level—not all members of an excluded ethnic group join in challenge. This article accounts for intra-ethnic group variation in terms of the network properties of local communities, nested within ethnic groups, and the informal
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The Durability of Client Regimes World Politics (IF 4.5) Pub Date : 2020-06-10 Adam E. Casey
Conventional wisdom holds that great power patrons prop up client dictatorships. But this is generally assumed rather than systematically analyzed. This article provides the first comprehensive analysis of the relationship between foreign sponsorship and authoritarian regime survival, using an original data set of all autocratic client regimes in the postwar period. The results demonstrate that patronage
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Local Order, Policing, and Bribes World Politics (IF 4.5) Pub Date : 2020-06-10 Juan Fernando Tellez, Erik Wibbels, Anirudh Krishna
Day-to-day policing represents a fundamental interface between citizens and states. Yet even in the most capable states, local policing varies enormously from one community to the next. The authors seek to understand this variation and in doing so make three contributions: First, they conceptualize communities and individuals as networks more or less capable of demanding high-quality policing. Second
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The Logic of Illicit Flows in Armed Conflict World Politics (IF 4.5) Pub Date : 2020-06-10 Annette Idler
Why is there variation in how violent nonstate groups interact in armed conflict? Where armed conflict and organized crime converge in unstable regions worldwide, these groups sometimes enter cooperative arrangements with opposing groups. Within the same unstable setting, violent nonstate groups forge stable, long-term relations with each other in some regions, engage in unstable, short-term arrangements
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Decentralization Without Democracy World Politics (IF 4.5) Pub Date : 2020-03-23 Katrina Kosec, Tewodaj Mogues
Increasingly, decentralization is being adopted by countries in which assumptions made by formal models of decentralization, such as electoral accountability and population mobility, fail to hold. How does decentralization affect public service delivery in such contexts? The authors exploit the partial rollout of decentralization in the autocratic context of Ethiopia and use a spatial regression discontinuity
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The Psychology of Repression and Polarization World Politics (IF 4.5) Pub Date : 2020-03-04 Elizabeth R. Nugent
How does political polarization occur under repressive conditions? Drawing on psychological theories of social identity, the author posits that the nature of repression drives polarization. Repression alters group identities, changing the perceived distance between groups and ultimately shaping the level of affective and preference polarization between them through differentiation processes. The author
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The Political Representation of Economic Interests World Politics (IF 4.5) Pub Date : 2020-03-04 Mads Andreas Elkjær, Torben Iversen
Rising inequality has caused concerns that democratic governments are no longer responding to majority demands, an argument the authors label thesubversion of democracy model(sdm). Thesdmcomes in two forms: one uses public opinion data to show that policies are strongly biased toward the preferences of the rich; the other uses macrolevel data to show that governments aren’t responding to rising inequality
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Historical Antecedents and Post-World War II Regionalism in the Americas World Politics (IF 4.5) Pub Date : 2020-02-24 Tom Long
After World War II, the US-led international security order exhibited substantial regional variation. Explaining this variation has been central to the debate over why is there nonatoin Asia. But this debate overlooks the emergence of multilateral security arrangements between the United States and Latin American countries during the same critical juncture. These inter-American institutions are puzzling
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Electoral Discrimination: The Relationship between Skin Color and Vote Buying in Latin America World Politics (IF 4.5) Pub Date : 2019-11-13 Marcus Johnson
Under what conditions do elections produce racially discriminatory outcomes? This article proposes electoral discrimination as an electoral mechanism for racial marginalization in indigenous and Afro-descendant Latin America. Electoral discrimination occurs when voters are mobilized under differential terms of electoral inclusion based on their observable characteristics. Using the 2010–2014 rounds
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Democratization, De Facto Power, and Taxation: Evidence from Military Occupation during Reconstruction World Politics (IF 4.5) Pub Date : 2019-11-13 Mario L. Chacón, Jeffrey L. Jensen
How important is the enforcement of political rights in new democracies? The authors use the enfranchisement of the emancipated slaves following the American Civil War to study this question. Critical to their strategy, black suffrage was externally enforced by the United States Army in ten Southern states during Reconstruction. The authors employ a triple-difference model to estimate the joint effect
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The Politics of Order in Informal Markets: Evidence from Lagos World Politics (IF 4.5) Pub Date : 2019-11-11 Shelby Grossman
Property rights are important for economic exchange, but in many parts of the world, they are not publicly guaranteed. Private market associations can fill this gap by providing an institutional structure to enforce agreements, but with this power comes the ability to extort from group members. Under what circumstances do private associations provide a stable environment for economic activity? The
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Voting for Victors: Why Violent Actors Win Postwar Elections World Politics (IF 4.5) Pub Date : 2019-08-29 Sarah Zukerman Daly
Why do citizens elect political actors who have perpetrated violence against the civilian population? Despite their use of atrocities, political parties with deep roots in the belligerent organizations of the past win postwar democratic elections in countries around the world. This article uses new, cross-national data on postwar elections globally between 1970 and 2010, as well as voting, survey,
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Can Transitional Justice Improve the Quality of Representation in New Democracies? World Politics (IF 4.5) Pub Date : 2019-08-28 Milena Ang, Monika Nalepa
Can transitional justice enhance democratic representation in countries recovering from authoritarian rule? The authors argue that lustration, a policy that reveals secret collaboration with the authoritarian regime, can prevent former authoritarian elites from extorting policy concessions from past collaborators who have been elected as politicians in the new regime. Absent lustration, former elites
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Vote Brokers, Clientelist Appeals, and Voter Turnout: Evidence from Russia and Venezuela World Politics (IF 4.5) Pub Date : 2019-08-27 Timothy Frye, Ora John Reuter, David Szakonyi
Modern clientelist exchange is typically carried out by intermediaries—party activists, employers, local strongmen, traditional leaders, and the like. Politicians use such brokers to mobilize voters, yet little about their relative effectiveness is known. The authors argue that broker effectiveness depends on their leverage over clients and their ability to monitor voters. They apply their theoretical
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Imperial Rule, the Imposition of Bureaucratic Institutions, and their Long-Term Legacies World Politics (IF 4.5) Pub Date : 2019-08-27 Jan P. Vogler
Significant variation in the institutions and efficiency of public bureaucracies across countries and regions are observed. These differences could be partially responsible for divergence in the effectiveness of policy implementation, corruption levels, and economic development. Do imperial legacies contribute to the observed variation in the organization of public administrations? Historical foreign
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Foreign Financing and the International Sources of Property Rights World Politics (IF 4.5) Pub Date : 2019-06-07 Timm Betz, Amy Pond
How do firms protect themselves against infringements of their property rights by their own government? The authors develop a theory based on international law and joint asset ownership with foreign firms. Investment agreements protect the assets of foreign firms but are not available to domestic firms. This segmentation of the property rights environment creates a rationale for international financial
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Propaganda and Combat Motivation: Radio Broadcasts and German Soldiers’ Performance in World War II World Politics (IF 4.5) Pub Date : 2019-06-06 Benjamin Barber, Charles Miller
What explains combat motivation in warfare? Scholars argue that monitoring, material rewards, and punishment alone are insufficient explanations. Further, competing ideological accounts of motivation are also problematic because ideas are difficult to operationalize and measure. To solve this puzzle, the authors combine extensive information from World War II about German soldiers’ combat performance
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Democratic Contradictions in European Settler Colonies World Politics (IF 4.5) Pub Date : 2019-06-06 Jack Paine
How did political institutions emerge and evolve under colonial rule? This article studies a key colonial actor and establishes core democratic contradictions in European settler colonies. Although European settlers’ strong organizational position enabled them to demand representative political institutions, the first hypothesis qualifies their impulse for electoral representation by positing the importance
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Electoral Consequences of Colonial Invention: Brokers, Chiefs, and Distribution in Northern Ghana World Politics (IF 4.5) Pub Date : 2019-06-04 Noah L. Nathan
This article studies the effects of traditional chiefs—a common type of broker—on voters’ ability to extract state resources from politicians. Using original data from Northern Ghana, the author shows that chieftaincy positions invented by colonial authorities are especially prone to capture, leaving voters worse off compared both to more accountable chiefs whose authority dates to the precolonial
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Strategic Violence during Democratization: Evidence from Myanmar World Politics (IF 4.5) Pub Date : 2019-03-12 Darin Christensen, Mai Nguyen, Renard Sexton
abstractDemocratic transitions are often followed by conflict. This article explores one explanation: the military’s strategic use of violence to retain control of economically valuable regions. The authors uncover this dynamic in Myanmar, a country transitioning from four decades of military rule. Fearing that the new civilian government will assert authority over jade mining, the military initiated
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Path to Centralization and Development: Evidence from Siam World Politics (IF 4.5) Pub Date : 2019-03-12 Christopher Paik, Jessica Vechbanyongratana
This article investigates the role of colonial pressure on state centralization and its relationship to subsequent development by analyzing the influence of Western colonial threats on Siam’s internal political reform. Unlike other countries in the region, Siam remained independent by adopting geographical administrative boundaries and incorporating its traditional governance structures into a new
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The Transition to the Knowledge Economy, Labor Market Institutions, and Income Inequality in Advanced Democracies World Politics (IF 4.5) Pub Date : 2019-03-12 David Hope, Angelo Martelli
The transition from Fordism to the knowledge economy in the world’s advanced democracies was underpinned by the revolution in information and communications technology (ict). The introduction and rapid diffusion of ict pushed up wages for college-educated workers with complementary skills and allowed top managers and CEOs to reap greater rewards for their own talents. Despite these common pressures
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Why Ethnic Subaltern-Led Parties Crowd Out Armed Organizations: Explaining Maoist Violence in India World Politics (IF 4.5) Pub Date : 2019-03-11 Kanchan Chandra, Omar García-Ponce
This article asks why some Indian districts experience chronic Maoist violence while others do not. The answer helps to explain India’s Maoist civil war, which is the product of the accumulation of violence in a few districts, as well as to generate a new hypothesis about the causes of civil war more generally. The authors argue that, other things equal, the emergence of subaltern-led parties at the
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Bridging the Gap: Lottery-Based Procedures in Early Parliamentarization World Politics (IF 4.5) Pub Date : 2019-03-11 Alexandra Cirone, Brenda Van Coppenolle
How is the use of political lotteries related to party development? This article discusses the effects of a lottery-based procedure used to distribute committee appointments that was once common across legislatures in nineteenth-century Europe. The authors analyze the effects of a political lottery in budget committee selection in the French Third Republic using a microlevel data set of French deputies