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      Electoral Institutions and Electoral Violence in Sub-Saharan Africa

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      British Journal of Political Science
      Cambridge University Press (CUP)

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          Abstract

          Political violence remains a pervasive feature of electoral dynamics in many countries in Sub-Saharan Africa, even where multiparty elections have become the dominant mode of regulating access to political power. With cross-national data on electoral violence in Sub-Saharan African elections between 1990 and 2010, this article develops and tests a theory that links the use of violent electoral tactics to the high stakes put in place by majoritarian electoral institutions. It is found that electoral violence is more likely in countries that employ majoritarian voting rules and elect fewer legislators from each district. Majoritarian institutions are, as predicted by theory, particularly likely to provoke violence where large ethno-political groups are excluded from power and significant economic inequalities exist.

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          Most cited references47

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          New Tools in Comparative Political Economy: The Database of Political Institutions

          S. T. Beck (2001)
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            Why Do Ethnic Groups Rebel? New Data and Analysis

            Much of the quantitative literature on civil wars and ethnic conflict ignores the role of the state or treats it as a mere arena for political competition among ethnic groups. Other studies analyze how the state grants or withholds minority rights and faces ethnic protest and rebellion accordingly, while largely overlooking the ethnic power configurations at the state's center. Drawing on a new data set on Ethnic Power Relations (EPR) that identifies all politically relevant ethnic groups and their access to central state power around the world from 1946 through 2005, the authors analyze outbreaks of armed conflict as the result of competing ethnonationalist claims to state power. The findings indicate that representatives of ethnic groups are more likely to initiate conflict with the government (1) the more excluded from state power they are, especially if they have recently lost power, (2) the higher their mobilizational capacity, and (3) the more they have experienced conflict in the past.
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              The Menu of Manipulation

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                Author and article information

                Journal
                applab
                British Journal of Political Science
                Brit. J. Polit. Sci.
                Cambridge University Press (CUP)
                0007-1234
                1469-2112
                April 2016
                August 27 2014
                April 2016
                : 46
                : 02
                : 297-320
                Article
                10.1017/S0007123414000179
                eff7c76c-6194-4959-bb32-fad9dcbdb027
                © 2016
                History

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