Elections Under Authoritarianism

Authors

  • Authors

  • Jennifer Gandhi
  • Ellen Lust-Okar
  • Translator

  • Hassane Hjij

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.31430/IPSJ9465

Keywords:

الدكتاتورية, السلوك الانتخابي, المؤسسات

Abstract

Current scholarship on elections in authoritarian regimes has focused on exploring the relationship between elections and democratization, and it has generally used analytical frameworks and methods imported from the study of genuinely democratic elections to do so. These tendencies have kept scholars from asking a wide range of questions about the micro-level dynamics of authoritarian elections and the systematic differences among them. With these issues in mind, this review examines literature that investigates the purpose of elections in dictatorships; the electoral behavior of voters, candidates, and incumbents in these elections; and the link between elections and democratization. The review ends with a call to redirect the study of authoritarian elections toward uncovering and explaining the important differences among them.

Author Biographies

  • Jennifer Gandhi
    Professor of Political Science, Emory University, Atlanta, Georgia, USA.
  • Ellen Lust-Okar
    Professor of Political Science, Yale University, New Haven, Connecticut, USA.
  • Hassane Hjij
    Moroccan Sociologist and Translator. Email: hassane.hjij@gmail.com

Published

2024-09-01

Cited twice

  1. تقديم: دراسة الانتخابات في العالم العربي: لماذا؟ وكيف؟ (2024)
  2. الانتخابات التشريعية والرئاسية في تونس عام 2019 : الحقل السياسي والسلوك الانتخابي وحراك النخب (2024)