Replication Data for: Democratic Reforms in Dictatorships: Elite Divisions, Party Origins, and the Prospects of Political Liberalization
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https://dataverse.harvard.edu/citation?persistentId=doi:10.7910/DVN/DEICII
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资源简介:
Divisions among regime elites in autocracies are often an important step toward
political liberalization. However, we know little about when such divisions contribute
to initiating democratic reforms. We argue that whether elite divisions lead
to liberalization depends on the historical origins of ruling parties. Using panel
matching analyses, we show that the positive effects of elite divisions on political
liberalization are significantly reduced when ruling parties originate from national
struggles such as revolutions, insurgencies, and independence movements. Specifically, dictators arising from such origins can prevent elite divisions from sparking
democratic reforms by providing “carrots” to the military and applying “sticks” to
citizens and political opponents. These results hold after multiple robustness tests
and additional analyses for causal mechanisms. Our findings suggest that party
origins are critical junctures that significantly shape regime prospects more than
regime origins suggested by the literature.
提供机构:
Harvard Dataverse
创建时间:
2024-11-05



