Organizer: Harvard University Asia Center
Description:
Across Southeast Asia, as in many other regions, politicians win elections by distributing cash, goods, jobs, projects, and other benefits to supporters. But they do so in ways that vary tremendously—both across and within countries. In this talk, and in our forthcoming book, Mobilizing for Elections: Patronage and Political Machines in Southeast Asia (also with Edward Aspinall and Paul Hutchcroft), we present a new framework for analyzing variation in patronage democracies, focusing on distinct forms of patronage and different networks through which it is distributed. We do so by drawing on a massive, multi-country, multi-year research effort involving interactions with hundreds of politicians and vote brokers, as well as surveys of voters and political campaigners across the region. We explore how local machines in the Philippines, ad hoc election teams in Indonesia, and political parties in Malaysia pursue distinctive clusters of strategies of patronage distribution—what we term electoral mobilization regimes. In doing so, we demonstrate how and why patronage politics varies, how it works on the ground, and how the status quo might change.
Speakers:
Meredith Weiss, Professor of Political Science, University at Albany
Allen Hicken, Professor of Political Science, University of Michigan
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