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*Lack of Scholarly Consensus:Significant disagreement remains among scholars regarding whether open or closed lists lead to more electoral corruption.
*Lack of Scholarly Consensus:Significant disagreement remains among scholars regarding whether open or closed lists lead to more electoral corruption.


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*Control of Local Institutions: Incumbency and Traditional Leaders
This subsection delves into how the control of local institutions, mainly through incumbency and traditional leadership, significantly influences the distribution and effectiveness of clientelistic strategies. The authors discuss how long-term incumbents, with their extended control over local administrative resources, can leverage these assets to influence electoral outcomes. This control allows for a more strategic deployment of state resources during elections, effectively turning state employees into brokers of clientelism.
The discussion further extends to the role of traditional leaders and local elites, who, like incumbents, can significantly sway electoral results. Deeply rooted in their communities, these leaders command respect and loyalty that can be mobilized for political purposes. Their ability to influence voter behavior, often for economic or ideological reasons, underscores the complex interplay between local governance structures and electoral clientelism.




Control of Local Institutions: Incubancy and Traditional Leaders
Control of Local Institutions: Incubancy and Traditional Leaders
As Mares & Young seek to understand the importance of the influence of electoral strategies within leaders, they will break down the variables that may arise with the practice of electoral clientelism  
 
*Mares & Young seek to understand the importance of the influence of electoral strategies within leaders, they will break down the variables that may arise with the practice of electoral clientelism  
  Clientelism: a practice where politicians exchange favors for political support from individuals or groups  Incubancy: a situation where a person currently holds a particular office or position
  Clientelism: a practice where politicians exchange favors for political support from individuals or groups  Incubancy: a situation where a person currently holds a particular office or position
Foundational understanding:
Foundational understanding:
  An important aspect of explaining the level and distribution of clientelism is understanding how political parties seek control over institutions, particularly local ones  
  An important aspect of explaining the level and distribution of clientelism is understanding how political parties seek control over institutions, particularly local ones.
Clientelism can be seen for instance with local leaders (mayors, traditional leaders) influencing voters for economic or ideological reasons
Clientelism can be seen for instance with local leaders (mayors, traditional leaders) influencing voters for economic or ideological reasons.
Argument:The greater the contact can be made for the benefit of political support, the more likely state resources will be deployed
Argument:The greater the contact can be made for the benefit of political support, the more likely state resources will be deployed


Studies:  
*Studies:  
Have found significant differences in the use of clientelistic strategies that involve state employee brokers, such as the provision of administrative favors  (Mares & Petriva 2014)
#Have found significant differences in the use of clientelistic strategies that involve state employee brokers, such as the provision of administrative favors  (Mares & Petriva 2014)
Mares & Muntean (2015): demonstrate differences between the use of welfare coercion for political turnover  
#Mares & Muntean (2015): demonstrate differences between the use of welfare coercion for political turnover  
Concluding:The structures of leadership may affect variation in clientelistic strategies by shaping the strength and availability of local leaders who command moral authority and resources to influence the electoral behavior of voters
##Concluding:The structures of leadership may affect variation in clientelistic strategies by shaping the strength and availability of local leaders who command moral authority and resources to influence the electoral behavior of voters
 
*VARIABLES
#Economic Conditions
##Employers electoral influence is the result of their control over important dimensions affecting the welfare of workers, such as their wages, levels of employment, or access to social policy benefits that are privately provided. 
# 3 factors lower the costs of economic intimidation in localities with high levels of concentration
## 1.Owing to their scale, larger firms incur lower costs in carrying out political activities, such as control of electoral turnover or the distribution of political material on behalf of a particular candidate
## 2.In concentrated localities, workers have fewer employment opportunities outside the firm
## 3.the concentration of employment in the hands of small members of actors reduces the possible coordination problems faced by employers in punishing workers with “dangerous” political views by denying them employment opportunities
 
*The willingness of employers to engage in electoral intimidation is also affected by labor market conditions such as labor scarcity


VARIABLES
*Voter Characteristics  
Economic Conditions
  #There is also compelling evidence that brokers and parties use different strategies against voters with different characteristics
Employers electoral influence is the result of their control over important dimensions affecting the welfare of workers, such as their wages, levels of employment, or access to social policy benefits that are privately provided
#These explanations refer to voters' partisan preferences, socioeconomic status, and psychological attributes
Three factors lower the costs of economic intimidation in localities with high levels of concentration
First, owing to their scale, larger firms incur lower costs in carrying out political activities, such as control of electoral turnover or the distribution of political material on behalf of a particular candidate
Second, in concentrated localities, workers have fewer employment opportunities outside the firm
Finally, the concentration of employment in the hands of small members of actors reduces the possible coordination problems faced by employers in punishing workers with “dangerous” political views by denying them employment opportunities
The willingness of employers to engage in electoral intimidation is also affected by labor market conditions such as labor scarcity
Voter Characteristics  
  There is also compelling evidence that brokers and parties use different strategies against voters with different characteristics
These explanations refer to voters' partisan preferences, socioeconomic status, and psychological attributes
   
   
POLICY OR PARTISAN PREFERENCE
*POLICY OR PARTISAN PREFERENCE
  There is compelling evidence that brokers and parties use different strategies against voters with different characteristics
   
These explanations refer to voters' partisan preferences, socioeconomic status, and psychological attributes
*Arguments on Partisan Preference:
Arguments on Partisan preference
 
Most formal theories on this topic have predicted that, under most conditions, parties should target inducements on voters with weak ideological affiliations  
#Formal theories often predict that parties should focus inducements on voters with weak ideological affiliations.
Some scholars have argued that core supporters are easier to target efficiently because they are embedded in partisan networks  
#Some argue that it's more efficient to target core supporters, who are deeply embedded in partisan networks.
Robinson & Torvick (2009) argue that parties should substitute violence for threats against swing voters because they are the most expensive to buy off if multiple parties are bidding for their votes
#Robinson & Torvick (2009) suggest that violence or threats should be used against swing voters, who are costly to win over due to competitive bidding from multiple parties.
Proposition
 
Stokes et. al. (2013) propose a “broker-mediated” theory of targeting in which politicians prefer to buy the votes of swing voters, but brokers who are imperfectly monitored end up mobilizing core supporters in order to capture rents
 
Study/Data  
#Stokes et al. (2013) propose that politicians ideally target swing voters for vote buying, but due to imperfect monitoring, brokers often mobilize core supporters to maximize their own benefits.
A study was conducted by collecting data from 10 countries in Africa to understand the amount of inducement offered and the fear of violence the results were the following:
 
The Afrobaometer data shows a negative and statistically significant relationship between being a swing voter and a vote-buying offer in six of the ten countries  
*Study/Data:
This evidence suggests that parties are more likely to offer positive inducements to their own core supporters, but little evidence supports that there is any targeting based on the strength of voters' party identifications, which runs counter to the idea that swing voters should be singled out for violence
 
Concluding: The threats of electoral violence, however, do not appear to be strongly targeted on the basis of voter partisan preference
#Data from 10 African countries show that swing voters are less likely to receive vote-buying offers, contradicting theories that they should be primarily targeted.
#No substantial evidence links the targeting of electoral threats or violence to voters’ partisan alignments.
Socioeconomic Status:
 
*Economic factors, especially income, significantly influence whether voters are targeted with inducements or subjected to violence.
 
#SocioeconomiC Argument
 
## It’s hypothesized that poorer voters are less likely to face violence as a substitute for vote buying, yet they are often more vulnerable due to their inability to afford personal security.
 
##In Africa, poorer voters tend to fear electoral violence more, evident in seven out of ten countries surveyed with high levels of such fear.
 
*Psychological Factors:
 
##Psychological attributes significantly affect how voters respond to electoral threats, potentially influencing their political actions
 
*Psychological Argument
 
##Emotional responses, shaped by campaign content, can significantly alter voter behavior, with anger proving more effective in mobilizing pro-opposition sentiments, especially in higher-income areas.
Concluding (Psychological):
 
*The effectiveness of electoral violence can partly be explained by how different psychological predispositions among citizens influence their reaction to threats or violence, suggesting varied emotional responses across different demographic groups.
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 


SOCIOECONOMIC STATUS
Looking further into different variables that might alter the approach of persuading votes, a socioeconomic analysis will be made
It is likely that economic factors such as income play an important role in determining whether voters are targetted with both positive and negative inducements
Argument:
If vote buying and violence are substitutes, then we might expect that parties would be less likely to use violence against poor voters because their
However low-income voters may also be the most vulnerable to violence, as they are least capable of investing in security
Study
The same afrobarameter measuring inducements offered and fear of violence was conducted upon such arguments and the results are the following:
Poorer voters are consistently more to be afraid of electoral violence in seven out of ten of the African countries with the most fear of electoral violence
Psychological Factors
As one of many possible factors for voting outcomes, Mares and Young explains how one of the major puzzles is the understanding of how brokers enforce contracts with voters despite the existence of the secret ballot
Secret Ballot: confidential voting method
Argument
That emotion shapes reaction to the threat of repression and con ultimately cost of a shift in political standpoints
Young (2015) finds that campaign ads shared by an opposition party in a repressive environment cause more pro-opposition political speech when they appeal to anger rather than enthusiasm and that this effect is particularly strong among voters in higher-income areas
Concluding
With the results Mares & Young can argue that results suggest that citizens vary in psychological propensity when it comes to mobilizing or demobilizing emotions in response to the threat of electoral violence to then help explain how effective violence is from the regime 
Summary
Summary
As trade-off and clientelistic mobilization was at the center of electoral processes, studies have been attempting to further disaggregate the types of clientelistic echnages that we can be seen done by brokers with candidates and voters. Questions such as “what are the most salient variables that explain variation across countries, regions, and localities in the mix of clientelistic strategies?” and “who are the voters being targetted by different clientelistic strategies?”. TTherefore Mares & Young seek to gain a further understanding of how local leaders/ brokers are important during elections and what changes are possible to shift influence strategies, as well as understanding when voters are more likely to support particular candidates if those relations are viewed as gifts or threats.
As trade-off and clientelistic mobilization was at the center of electoral processes, studies have been attempting to further disaggregate the types of clientelistic echnages that we can be seen done by brokers with candidates and voters. Questions such as “what are the most salient variables that explain variation across countries, regions, and localities in the mix of clientelistic strategies?” and “who are the voters being targetted by different clientelistic strategies?”. TTherefore Mares & Young seek to gain a further understanding of how local leaders/ brokers are important during elections and what changes are possible to shift influence strategies, as well as understanding when voters are more likely to support particular candidates if those relations are viewed as gifts or threats.

Revision as of 04:51, 2 May 2024

"Buying, Expropriating, and Stealing Votes" by Isabela Mares and Lauren Young.

  • Main Topic: Explores the complex dynamics of electoral influence worldwide, examining how voters are influenced by both threats and promises based on their vote.
    • Clientelism Evolution: Details the progression of clientelism, highlighting the variety of intermediaries involved in the electoral process and the different tactics they employ.
    • Types of Clientelism: Distinguishes between positive inducements (rewards) and negative inducements (threats).
    • Purpose of Introduction: Sets up for a detailed examination of the strategic use of coercive (forceful) and non-coercive (voluntary) tactics in electoral politics.
    • Research Necessity: Emphasizes the importance of further research to understand the effects of these strategies on democratic integrity and voter independence.

Definitions

  • Definition of Clientelism: Clientelism involves a transactional relationship where voters receive individual incentives from politicians to vote in a specific way, mediated through brokers.
  • Distinction from Other Practices: This differs from general promises of benefits which are not tied to individual votes, and from electoral fraud that does not consider voter preferences.
  1. Types of Inducements:
    1. Positive Inducements: Tangible rewards like money, goods, or favors exchanged for votes.
    2. Negative Inducements: Threats of economic or physical harm used to influence voting behavior,including withdrawal of benefits, eviction, or violence.
  • Challenges in Measurement: Difficulty in measuring inducements due to their illegal nature and the mutual desire to conceal these transactions, especially where vote-buying is illegal.
  • Voter Expectations: The influence of voter expectations on the perception and effectiveness of inducements. The anticipation versus actual receipt of benefits can shift the nature of the inducement from positive to negative.
  • Psychological Impact: The psychological effects of gains versus losses play a crucial role, indicating that voters’ perceptions significantly impact electoral decisions in the context of clientelism.

The Multidimensionality of Clientelism: Variety of Brokers and Strategies

  • Topic: Discussion on the variety of brokers and strategies in clientelism, highlighting the critical role of intermediaries in linking political candidates and voters. There is an increased academic focus on understanding the complex dynamics between brokers, candidates, and voters.
  1. Types of Brokers:
    1. Partisan Brokers: Affiliated directly with political parties.
    2. State Employees: Government officials or workers.
    3. Civil Society and Religious Organizations: Groups involved in community and religious activities.
    4. Private Actors: Employers, business leaders.
    5. Ethnic Leaders: Representatives of specific ethnic groups.
    6. Criminal Organizations: Illegal groups leveraging their influence.
  • Forms of Inducements:
    1. Positive Inducements: Monetary gifts, services, and other beneficial rewards.
    2. Negative Inducements: Threats of violence, economic harm, or other punitive measures.
    3. Strategic Choices: Brokers and political actors select strategies based on the institutional setting, voter characteristics, and economic conditions, affecting the combination of clientelistic tactics used.


  • Explaining Mixes in Clientelism: The Role of Institutions and Economic Conditions
  1. The authors argue that the diversity in clientelistic practices can be attributed to the specific political and economic settings within different regions or countries.

The discussion begins by acknowledging the significant role of electoral rules, such as the level of ballot secrecy and the legal ramifications for illicit electoral strategies, in determining the prevalence and type of clientelism. Mares and Young delve into the dynamics of how voter characteristics, including socioeconomic status and psychological factors, influence the likelihood of being targeted by clientelistic strategies. This nuanced analysis suggests that political actors strategically select a mix of clientelistic approaches based on the anticipated effectiveness of these strategies in different institutional and economic contexts. Furthermore, the text explores the impact of economic conditions on clientelism, highlighting how economic disparities and labor market conditions influence the feasibility and desirability of various clientelistic strategies. The authors point to the interplay between economic factors and institutional settings as critical in shaping the strategic choices of political actors, thereby affecting the overall landscape of clientelism.

  • Voting Secrecy

This subsection investigates how the degree of ballot secrecy influences the strategies employed in clientelism. This analysis sheds light on the crucial role that the protection of voter secrecy plays in shaping electoral tactics. The authors argue that threats of post-electoral retribution are potent when ballot secrecy is inadequately protected, suggesting a greater reliance on intimidation strategies under such conditions. Conversely, the enforcement of laws safeguarding voting secrecy tends to diminish the utilization of these coercive methods.

  • Monitoring and Punishment of Malfeasance
  • Analysis Focus: Examines the impact of monitoring and punishment severity on electoral misconduct.
  • Effect of Monitoring: Increased monitoring typically reduces electoral malfeasance.
    1. European Case Study: Post-suffrage expansion in European countries provides a valuable context for exploring electoral clientelism.
  • Variations in Malpractice: Notes significant cross-national differences in electoral irregularities like vote buying, intimidation, and ballot stuffing following the adoption of voter secrecy.
  • Role of Electoral Laws: The enforcement of stringent electoral laws shapes the strategies of political actors.
    1. Strategic Adaptation: In regions with harsh penalties for vote buying, such practices are deterred.

Political actors shift tactics, possibly toward intimidation by state employees or unpenalized actions by employers.

    1. Strategic Calculus: Political actors adapt their strategies based on the existing monitoring and punishment environment, demonstrating a nuanced understanding of the risks and benefits of different electoral malpractices.


  • Electoral Systems and Irregularities
  • Focus on Electoral Systems: Investigates how different electoral systems affect the prevalence of electoral irregularities.
  • Inconclusive Research Findings:Some studies indicate that proportional representation systems may have higher levels of electoral corruption than plurality systems.

Other studies show no definitive link between the type of electoral system and the level of electoral malfeasance.

  • Complexity and Challenges: Difficulty in establishing clear relationships between electoral systems and specific strategies of electoral manipulation.
  • Exploration of Candidate Selection Rules:Examines whether open or closed list systems in electoral politics influence corruption levels differently.
  • Lack of Scholarly Consensus:Significant disagreement remains among scholars regarding whether open or closed lists lead to more electoral corruption.



Control of Local Institutions: Incubancy and Traditional Leaders

  • Mares & Young seek to understand the importance of the influence of electoral strategies within leaders, they will break down the variables that may arise with the practice of electoral clientelism
Clientelism: a practice where politicians exchange favors for political support from individuals or groups   Incubancy: a situation where a person currently holds a particular office or position

Foundational understanding:

An important aspect of explaining the level and distribution of clientelism is understanding how political parties seek control over institutions, particularly local ones.

Clientelism can be seen for instance with local leaders (mayors, traditional leaders) influencing voters for economic or ideological reasons. Argument:The greater the contact can be made for the benefit of political support, the more likely state resources will be deployed

  • Studies:
  1. Have found significant differences in the use of clientelistic strategies that involve state employee brokers, such as the provision of administrative favors (Mares & Petriva 2014)
  2. Mares & Muntean (2015): demonstrate differences between the use of welfare coercion for political turnover
    1. Concluding:The structures of leadership may affect variation in clientelistic strategies by shaping the strength and availability of local leaders who command moral authority and resources to influence the electoral behavior of voters
  • VARIABLES
  1. Economic Conditions
    1. Employers electoral influence is the result of their control over important dimensions affecting the welfare of workers, such as their wages, levels of employment, or access to social policy benefits that are privately provided.
  2. 3 factors lower the costs of economic intimidation in localities with high levels of concentration
## 1.Owing to their scale, larger firms incur lower costs in carrying out political activities, such as control of electoral turnover or the distribution of political material on behalf of a particular candidate 
## 2.In concentrated localities, workers have fewer employment opportunities outside the firm
## 3.the concentration of employment in the hands of small members of actors reduces the possible coordination problems faced by employers in punishing workers with “dangerous” political views by denying them employment opportunities 
  • The willingness of employers to engage in electoral intimidation is also affected by labor market conditions such as labor scarcity
  • Voter Characteristics
#There is also compelling evidence that brokers and parties use different strategies against voters with different characteristics
  1. These explanations refer to voters' partisan preferences, socioeconomic status, and psychological attributes
  • POLICY OR PARTISAN PREFERENCE
  • Arguments on Partisan Preference:
  1. Formal theories often predict that parties should focus inducements on voters with weak ideological affiliations.
  2. Some argue that it's more efficient to target core supporters, who are deeply embedded in partisan networks.
  3. Robinson & Torvick (2009) suggest that violence or threats should be used against swing voters, who are costly to win over due to competitive bidding from multiple parties.


  1. Stokes et al. (2013) propose that politicians ideally target swing voters for vote buying, but due to imperfect monitoring, brokers often mobilize core supporters to maximize their own benefits.
  • Study/Data:
  1. Data from 10 African countries show that swing voters are less likely to receive vote-buying offers, contradicting theories that they should be primarily targeted.
  2. No substantial evidence links the targeting of electoral threats or violence to voters’ partisan alignments.

Socioeconomic Status:

  • Economic factors, especially income, significantly influence whether voters are targeted with inducements or subjected to violence.
  1. SocioeconomiC Argument
    1. It’s hypothesized that poorer voters are less likely to face violence as a substitute for vote buying, yet they are often more vulnerable due to their inability to afford personal security.
    1. In Africa, poorer voters tend to fear electoral violence more, evident in seven out of ten countries surveyed with high levels of such fear.
  • Psychological Factors:
    1. Psychological attributes significantly affect how voters respond to electoral threats, potentially influencing their political actions
  • Psychological Argument
    1. Emotional responses, shaped by campaign content, can significantly alter voter behavior, with anger proving more effective in mobilizing pro-opposition sentiments, especially in higher-income areas.

Concluding (Psychological):

  • The effectiveness of electoral violence can partly be explained by how different psychological predispositions among citizens influence their reaction to threats or violence, suggesting varied emotional responses across different demographic groups.





Summary As trade-off and clientelistic mobilization was at the center of electoral processes, studies have been attempting to further disaggregate the types of clientelistic echnages that we can be seen done by brokers with candidates and voters. Questions such as “what are the most salient variables that explain variation across countries, regions, and localities in the mix of clientelistic strategies?” and “who are the voters being targetted by different clientelistic strategies?”. TTherefore Mares & Young seek to gain a further understanding of how local leaders/ brokers are important during elections and what changes are possible to shift influence strategies, as well as understanding when voters are more likely to support particular candidates if those relations are viewed as gifts or threats.