Authoritarian Stability in the South Caucasus

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Abstract Promise
Ambiguous Promises
Armenia
Authoritarianism
autocratic regime voter interaction
Category=JPHF
Caucasus
Caucasus Barometer Survey
Competitive Authoritarian Regimes
competitive authoritarianism
Dustin Gilbreath
Elections
electoral manipulation
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eq_nobargain
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Expected Vote Share
Gdp Growth
Georgia
Georgian Dream
Georgian Dream Coalition
Georgian Voters
Giorgi Babunashvili
Hybrid Regimes
Increased State Capacity
Koba Turmanidze
Nagorny Karabakh
Nagorny Karabakh Conflict
NATO Membership
Party Promises
patronage networks
policy responsiveness
post-Soviet politics
quantitative qualitative analysis
Random Assignment
Rati Shubladze
Regime stability
Retrospective Voting
RPE
Sona Balasanyan
State Capacity
State Capacity Developed
Treatment Vignettes
Tsisana Khundadze
UNM
UNM Government
Voter Party Linkages
voting behaviour
Winning Coalition

Product details

  • ISBN 9781138478374
  • Weight: 420g
  • Dimensions: 174 x 246mm
  • Publication Date: 27 Mar 2018
  • Publisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd
  • Publication City/Country: GB
  • Product Form: Hardback
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In recent years, competitive authoritarianism has become an increasingly common form of non-democratic politics. What is the relationship between the demand for particular public policies and a regime’s durability in office in such cases? How does policy-making interact with organizational power, the willingness to resort to coercion and patronage politics in countries home to democratic-looking institutions that none the less fall short of democratic standards?

In this book we show that such regimes do more than just survive and collapse. Moreover, we argue that far from being passive pawns in the hands of their leaders voters in competitive authoritarian regimes, do matter are taken seriously. We investigate how regimes and voters interact in the cases of Georgia and Armenia, two post-Soviet countries in the South Caucasus, to identify how voters preferences feed into policy-making and gauge the extent to which the regimes’ adjustment of their policies crucially affects regime stability. To these ends, we draw on a variety of quantitative and qualitative methods, including a survey experiment carried out in the two countries.

The volume was originally published as a special issue of the journal Caucasus Survey.

Matteo Fumagalli is Senior Lecturer in International Relations at the University of St Andrews, UK Koba Turmanidze is Director of the Caucasus Resource Research Centre in Tbilisi, Georgia