Voting for Autocracy: Hegemonic Party Survival and Its Demise in Mexico

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Cambridge University Press, 4 sept. 2006 - 296 páginas
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This book provides a theory of the logic of survival of the Institutional Revolutionary Party (PRI), one of the most resilient autocratic regimes in the twentieth century. An autocratic regime hid behind the facade of elections that were held with clockwise precision. Although their outcome was totally predictable, elections were not hollow rituals. The PRI made millions of ordinary citizens vest their interests in the survival of the autocratic regime. Voters could not simply throw the "rascals out of office" because their choices were constrained by a series of strategic dilemmas that compelled them to support the autocrats. The book also explores the factors that led to the demise of the PRI. The theory sheds light on the logic of "electoral autocracies," among the most common type of autocracy today, and the factors that lead to the transformation of autocratic elections into democratic ones. This book is the only systematic treatment in the literature today dealing with this form of autocracy.

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Review: Voting For Autocracy: Hegemonic Party Survival And Its Demise In Mexico

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Read for a class on authoritarianism. Cool book. Magaloni uses formal modeling and game theory to support her argument that the PRI was able to stay in power for 72 years because of combination of delivering economic growth, clientelism and its overwhelming electoral victories. Leer reseña completa

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Sobre el autor (2006)

Beatriz Magaloni is Assistant Professor of Political Science at Stanford University.

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