
In Many Recent Democracies, Candidates Compete For Office Using Illegal Strategies To Influence Voters. In Hungary And Romania, Local Actors Including Mayors And Bureaucrats Offer Access To Social Policy Benefits To Voters Who Offer To Support Their Preferred Candidates, And They Threaten Others With The Loss Of A Range Of Policy And Private Benefits For Voting The Way. These Quid Pro Quo Exchanges Are Often Called Clientelism. How Can Politicians And Their Accomplices Get Away With Such Illegal Campaigning In Otherwise Democratic, Competitive Elections? When Do They Rely On The Worst Forms Of Clientelism That Involve Threatening Voters And Manipulating Public Benefits? Conditionality And Coercion: Electoral Clientelism In Eastern Europe Uses A Mixed Method Approach To Understand How Illegal Forms Of Campaigning Including Vote Buying And Electoral Coercion Persist In Two Democratic Countries In The European Union. It Argues That We Must Disaggregate Clientelistic Strategies Based On Whether They Use Public Or Private Resources, And Whether They Involve Positive Promises Or Negative Threats And Coercion. We Document That The Type Of Clientelistic Strategies That Candidates And Brokers Use Varies Systematically Across Localities Based On Their Underlying Social Coalitions. We Also Show That Voters Assess And Sanction Different Forms Of Clientelism In Different Ways. Voters Glean Information About Politicians' Personal Characteristics And Their Policy Preferences From The Clientelistic Strategies These Candidates Deploy. Most Voters Judge Candidates Who Use Clientelism Harshly. So How Does Clientelism, Including Its Most Odious Coercive Forms, Persist In Democratic Systems? This Book Suggests That Politicians Can Get Away With Clientelism By Using Forms Of It That Are In Line With The Policy Preferences Of Constituencies Whose Votes They Need. Clientelistic And Programmatic Strategies Are Not As Distinct As Previous Have Argued. Oxford Studies In Democratization Is A S
This book investigates how politicians in competitive democratic systems successfully employ illegal clientelistic strategies, including vote buying and electoral coercion, to influence voter behavior. Authors Isabela Mares and Lauren E. Young utilize a mixed-methods approach to analyze political behavior in Hungary and Romania. They argue that clientelism is not a monolithic practice but a varied set of strategies contingent upon the use of public versus private resources and the application of positive incentives versus negative threats. The authors contend that these strategies persist because they are often aligned with the policy preferences of specific local social coalitions.
What You Will Find
Scope Limits
Experts in the field of democratization identify this work as a significant contribution to the study of political behavior and electoral integrity. Readers frequently note the academic rigor and the clarity of the authors' framework in distinguishing between programmatic and clientelistic political strategies.
Page Count:
336
Publication Date:
2019-01-01
Publisher:
Oxford University Press
ISBN-10:
0192569120
ISBN-13:
9780192569127
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