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Why Governments and Parties Manipulate Elections
Theory, Practice, and Implications

This book documents the widespread use of blatant and excessive manipulation of elections and explains what drives this practice.

Alberto Simpser (Author)

9781107448681, Cambridge University Press

Paperback / softback, published 30 October 2014

304 pages, 12 b/w illus. 20 tables
22.9 x 15.2 x 1.7 cm, 0.45 kg

'Why Governments and Parties Manipulate Elections develops a theory of electoral manipulation that moves the informational role of manipulation to center stage. The 'informational turn' it proposes represents a significant advance in the comparative study of electoral fraud. Most studies on electoral malpractice stress its material effects: governments manipulate elections to win them. Alberto Simpser, by contrast, highlights its communicative role: governments manipulate elections to send messages of strength and resolve. Theoretically innovative and empirically rich, the book offers a commendable blend of formal modeling, statistical analysis, and case studies. It is obligatory reading for all students of elections, political manipulation, and authoritarianism.' Andreas Schedler, CIDE, Mexico City

Why do parties and governments cheat in elections they cannot lose? This book documents the widespread use of blatant and excessive manipulation of elections and explains what drives this practice. Alberto Simpser shows that, in many instances, elections are about more than winning. Electoral manipulation is not only a tool used to gain votes, but also a means of transmitting or distorting information. This manipulation conveys an image of strength, shaping the behavior of citizens, bureaucrats, politicians, parties, unions and businesspeople to the benefit of the manipulators, increasing the scope for the manipulators to pursue their goals while in government and mitigating future challenges to their hold on power. Why Governments and Parties Manipulate Elections provides a general theory about what drives electoral manipulation and empirically documents global patterns of manipulation.

Preface: more than winning
1. Introduction and overview
2. Electoral manipulation: what it is and how to measure it
3. The puzzle of excessive and blatant manipulation
4. More than winning: the consequences of excessive and blatant electoral manipulation
5. The strategic logic of electoral manipulation
6. The theory at work: evidence from case studies
7. Indirect effects of electoral manipulation: quantitative evidence
8. Conclusion.

Subject Areas: Political economy [KCP], Political structures: democracy [JPHV], Elections & referenda [JPHF], Political structure & processes [JPH], Comparative politics [JPB]

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