Results 141 to 150 of about 726 (201)
Navigating turbulence: analyzing the resilience of Lebanon's healthcare system in a multi-crisis scenario. [PDF]
Yamout R +4 more
europepmc +1 more source
Engineered non-contestation: Deterring electoral contestation using violence in local elections. [PDF]
Das N.
europepmc +1 more source
African experiments in infrastructure financialisation: an urbanisation of debt in Malawi. [PDF]
Lane M, Mwathunga E, Robinson J.
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2019
Abstract Chapter 2 presents the theoretical framework of the analysis. Definitional and conceptual issues related to the study of electoral clientelism are clarified, and a classification of clientelistic strategies that differentiates among strategies based on public versus private resources, and those structured as positive promises ...
Isabela Mares, Lauren E. Young
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Abstract Chapter 2 presents the theoretical framework of the analysis. Definitional and conceptual issues related to the study of electoral clientelism are clarified, and a classification of clientelistic strategies that differentiates among strategies based on public versus private resources, and those structured as positive promises ...
Isabela Mares, Lauren E. Young
openaire +1 more source
Dividend Clienteles, the Tax‐Clientele Hypothesis, and Utilities
Financial Review, 1990AbstractStudies of ex‐dividend day behavior have detected dividend‐clientele effects. The ratio of the ex‐day price drop to the dividend is typically less than unity and correlated with dividend yield. The tax‐clientele hypothesis attributes these effects to personal taxation.
David L. Skinner, John E. Gilster
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Comparative Political Studies, 2008
In choosing strategies of state capture (the extraction of private benefits by incumbent officeholders from the state), rulers choose whether to share rents with popular constituencies and whether to tolerate competition. These choices are conditioned by existing organizational endowments, the costs of buying support, and the trade-off between the ...
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In choosing strategies of state capture (the extraction of private benefits by incumbent officeholders from the state), rulers choose whether to share rents with popular constituencies and whether to tolerate competition. These choices are conditioned by existing organizational endowments, the costs of buying support, and the trade-off between the ...
openaire +1 more source
This Element examines clientelism and its impact on democratic institutions and markets, emphasizing that, alongside electoral competition, politics hosts two additional arenas: one where political actors seek campaign resources and active supporters, and another where socioeconomic actors pursue access to state-distributed resources.
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Comparative Sociology, 2020
Abstract Carbon dioxide (CO2) emissions are rapidly increasing across the world. While national governments are usually seen as having the power, authority, and ability to make significant reductions in their CO2 outputs, cross-national research rarely focuses on the institutional structures of states that moderate their CO2 emissions.
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Abstract Carbon dioxide (CO2) emissions are rapidly increasing across the world. While national governments are usually seen as having the power, authority, and ability to make significant reductions in their CO2 outputs, cross-national research rarely focuses on the institutional structures of states that moderate their CO2 emissions.
openaire +1 more source
2009
Abstract This article studies political clientelism. In the first section, the term clientelism can be defined as giving material goods in return for electoral support, where the criterion of distribution that the patron uses is simply: did you/will you support me? This section includes definitions of vote buying and patronage.
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Abstract This article studies political clientelism. In the first section, the term clientelism can be defined as giving material goods in return for electoral support, where the criterion of distribution that the patron uses is simply: did you/will you support me? This section includes definitions of vote buying and patronage.
openaire +1 more source

