Checkbook elections? : political finance in comparative perspective

Bibliographic Information

Checkbook elections? : political finance in comparative perspective

edited by Pippa Norris and Andrea Abel van Es

Oxford University Press, c2016

  • : pbk

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Note

"The Electoral Integrity Project"

Includes bibliographical references (p. 289-314) and index

Description and Table of Contents

Description

Money is essential to the functioning of electoral politics, yet regulating its appropriate use raises complex and controversial challenges in countries around the world. Both long-established democracies and emerging economies have been continually plagued by problems of financial malfeasance, graft, corruption, and cronyism. To throw new light on these important challenges, this book addresses three related questions: (1) what types of public policies are commonly used in attempts to regulate the role of money in politics?, (2) what triggers landmark finance reforms? and, (3) above all, what works, what fails, and why - when countries implement reforms? Checkbook Elections? presents an original theory for understanding policies regulating political finance, reflecting the degree to which laws are laissez-faire or guided by state intervention. Each chapter is written by an area specialist and collectively cover long-established democracies as well as hybrid regimes, affluent post-industrial societies (Sweden, the United States, Britain, and Japan), major emerging economies (Russia, Brazil, and South Africa) and developing societies (India and Indonesia).

Table of Contents

List of Figures List of Tables Preface and Acknowledgments About the Contributors INTRODUCTION 1. Understanding Political Finance Reform Pippa Norris and Andrea Abel van Es CASE STUDIES 2. Brazil Bruno Speck 3. Britain Justin Fisher 4. India Eswaran Sridharan and Milan Vaishnav 5. Indonesia Marcus Mietzner 6. Japan Matthew Carlson 7. Russia Grigorii V. Golosov 8. South Africa Richard Calland 9. Sweden Magnus Ohman 10. United States Richard Briffault COMPARATIVE EVIDENCE 11. Why Regulate? Andrea Abel van Es 12. Does Regulation Work? Pippa Norris and Andrea Abel van Es CONCLUSIONS 13. The Lessons for Political Finance Reform Pippa Norris and Andrea Abel van Es Technical and Statistical Appendices Select Bibliography Index

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