2019
DOI: 10.1177/0022343319884985
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Unequal votes, unequal violence: Malapportionment and election violence in India

Abstract: Elections held outside of advanced, industrialized democracies can turn violent because elites use coercion to demobilize political opponents. The literature has established that closely contested elections are associated with more violence. I depart from this emphasis on competitiveness by highlighting how institutional biases in electoral systems, in particular uneven apportionment, affect incentives for violence. Malapportionment refers to a discrepancy between the share of legislative seats and the share o… Show more

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Cited by 37 publications
(21 citation statements)
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“…Their analysis of Zambia finds that incumbent and opposition strongholds experience more violence, especially in constituencies with good connectivity. Finally, Daxecker (2020) shows that the greater electoral influence of overrepresented constituencies reduces the demand for electoral violence in these areas. These contributions highlight the importance of establishing the microfoundations of arguments on high-stakes elections and violence that we noted in the previous section.…”
Section: The Institutional Foundations Of Electoral Violencementioning
confidence: 97%
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“…Their analysis of Zambia finds that incumbent and opposition strongholds experience more violence, especially in constituencies with good connectivity. Finally, Daxecker (2020) shows that the greater electoral influence of overrepresented constituencies reduces the demand for electoral violence in these areas. These contributions highlight the importance of establishing the microfoundations of arguments on high-stakes elections and violence that we noted in the previous section.…”
Section: The Institutional Foundations Of Electoral Violencementioning
confidence: 97%
“…High-stakes elections A third theme pertains to the stakes in elections and their effect on violence. Articles examine the underlying conditions contributing to high-stake elections (Klaus, 2020) and question the conventional wisdom linking competitiveness to greater risk of violence (Wahman & Goldring, 2020;Daxecker, 2020). Klaus (2020) examines how the distribution of land rights in Kenya shapes people's trust in state institutions and perceptions of the electoral process.…”
Section: The Institutional Foundations Of Electoral Violencementioning
confidence: 99%
See 1 more Smart Citation
“…To explain variation in electoral violence, existing literature has pointed to variables that increase the incentives of political contenders to resort to violent electoral strategies. Factors that strengthen the competitiveness of the race and raise the potential payoffs from swinging the vote at the margin include the closeness of the vote (Hafner-Burton, Hyde & Jablonski, 2014; Salehyan & Linebarger, 2015; Wilkinson, 2004); whether the incumbent is standing for re-election (Taylor, Pevehouse & Straus, 2017); whether the country has seen a turnover in power (Ruiz-Rufino & Birch, 2020); whether electoral rules produce winner-takes-all outcomes (Fjelde & Höglund, 2016); and whether the electoral district in question is underrepresented in the national votes-to-seats allocation (Daxecker, 2020). Scholars have also highlighted variations in the constraints on actors to engage in violence, such as the institutional limits on the decisionmaking powers of the executive (Hafner-Burton, Hyde & Jablonski, 2014); the presence of international monitors (Daxecker, 2012, 2014; Asunka et al, 2017) or institutional weakness (Norris, Richard & Martínez i Coma, 2015; Salehyan & Linebarger, 2015).…”
Section: Existing Literaturementioning
confidence: 99%
“…Although most quantitative work on election violence has studied cross-national variation (Daxecker, 2014; Fjelde & Höglund, 2016; Fjelde, 2020; Hafner Burton, Hyde & Jablonski, 2014; Straus & Taylor, 2012; Taylor, Pevehouse & Straus, 2017; von Borzyskowski, 2019), several recent studies have concentrated on subnational dynamics of election-related conflict (e.g. Daxecker, 2020; Dercon & Guitérrez-Romero, 2012; Goldring & Wahman, 2018; Malik, 2018; Reeder & Seeberg, 2018). However, these studies do not theorize that competition plays a markedly different role at the subnational level than it does at the cross-national level.…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%