- Pop-Eleches and Tucker present a new framework for considering the effect of communist-era legacies on postcommunist political values and behavior.
- Maleski, Abrami, and Zheng compare the impact of institutions on income inequality in China and Vietnam.
- Green offers a new theory explaining patronage allocation based on the logic of institutional choice, whereby political leaders allocate patronage in accordance with the varying political threats they face.
- Day examines the structural factors that influence the outcomes experienced by failed rebel groups, with a case focus on Uganda.
- Balán examines the political dynamics that lead to corruption scandals, focusing on cases in Chile and Argentina.
- Nylen composes a review essay on the next generation of literature on participatory institutions in Latin America.
Thursday, September 29, 2011
Summary: Comparative Politics - Volume 43, Issue 4 - July 2011
In this issue of Comparative Politics:
Labels:
Comparative Politics,
Journals,
Summaries