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Patrons, Clients and Policies: Patterns of Democratic Accountability and Political Competition

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Most models of party competition assume that citizens vote for a platform rather than narrowly targeted material benefits. However, there are many countries where politicians win elections by giving money, jobs, and services in direct exchange for votes. This is not just true in the developing world, but also in economically developed countries - such as Japan and Austria - that clearly meet the definition of stable, modern democracies. This book offers explanations for why politicians engage in clientelistic behaviours and why voters respond. Using newly collected data on national and sub-national patterns of patronage and electoral competition, the contributors demonstrate why explanations based on economic modernization or electoral institutions cannot account for international variation in patron-client and programmatic competition. Instead, they show how the interaction of economic development, party competition, governance of the economy, and ethnic heterogeneity may work together to determine the choices of patrons, clients and policies.

392 pages, Paperback

First published March 29, 2007

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Herbert Kitschelt

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23 reviews1 follower
March 13, 2008
It's SO good--just can't seem to put it down (almost daily) though I long for a day where I can leave it on the shelf.
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