Transparency and Oversight in Campaign Finance
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Product details
- ISBN 9781041319030
- Dimensions: 138 x 216mm
- Publication Date: 19 Jun 2026
- Publisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd
- Publication City/Country: GB
- Product Form: Hardback
For 50 years, the Alaska Public Offices Commission (APOC) has been responsible for enforcing the state’s campaign finance, conflict-of-interest, and lobbying laws. Created by citizen initiative in 1974, the agency has faced constant political pressure, including eight legislative attempts to abolish it. This book traces APOC’s turbulent history and shows how public opinion, court rulings, and repeated citizen-led initiatives kept the agency alive despite ongoing efforts to weaken it. It offers a rare inside look at how a regulatory body survives in a politically charged environment.
Unlike most studies of campaign finance, which focus on national trends or compare multiple states, former APOC Executive Director Paul R. Dauphinais offers an in-depth, unbiased examination of a single state, Alaska, grounded in firsthand experience and a nonpartisan historical lens. Alaska’s geographic isolation, extractive economy, and small legislature create a distinctive political ecosystem that allows for unusually close study of how laws are enforced and resisted. Dauphinais highlights how oil wealth, lobbying pressures, legislative turnover, and shifting political incentives have shaped APOC’s work and the controversies surrounding it.
By examining what happens after elections, how laws are implemented, how violators fare, and how voters respond when elected officials attempt to weaken oversight, the book offers a fresh perspective on democratic accountability. It will appeal to scholars and students of state politics, public administration, political reform, and the evolving relationship between citizens and the institutions designed to regulate those who govern them.
Paul Dauphinais has led a varied professional life. He was a secondary school teacher for a short time before joining the US Navy. He retired after 21 years of service in 1999. He earned a doctorate in history from the University of Maine and has been an administrator and instructor at several institutions. He worked for the University of Alaska from 2002–2006 and was the executive director of the Alaska Public Offices Commission from 2011–2016. He has
been happily retired since 2016, pursuing his research interests.
