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The Adverse Effects of Sunshine: A Field Experiment on Legislative Transparency in an Authoritarian Assembly

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TLDR
In this paper, the authors argue that under these conditions, transparency may have perverse effects, and test this theory with a randomized experiment on delegate behavior in query sessions in Vietnam, a single-party authoritarian regime.
Abstract
An influential literature has demonstrated that legislative transparency can improve the performance of parliamentarians in democracies. In a democracy, the incentive for improved performance is created by voters’ responses to newly available information. Building on this work, donor projects have begun to export transparency interventions to authoritarian regimes under the assumption that nongovernmental organizations and the media can substitute for the incentives created by voters. Such interventions, however, are at odds with an emerging literature that argues that authoritarian parliaments primarily serve the role of co-optation and limited power sharing, where complaints can be raised in a manner that does not threaten regime stability. We argue that under these conditions, transparency may have perverse effects, and we test this theory with a randomized experiment on delegate behavior in query sessions in Vietnam, a single-party authoritarian regime. We find no evidence of a direct effect of the transparency treatment on delegate performance; however, further analysis reveals that delegates subjected to high treatment intensity demonstrate robust evidence of curtailed participation and damaged reelection prospects. These results make us cautious about the export of transparency without electoral sanctioning.

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Journal ArticleDOI

How Conditioning on Posttreatment Variables Can Ruin Your Experiment and What to Do about It

TL;DR: The authors demonstrate the severity of experimental post-treatment bias analytically and document the magnitude of the potential distortions it induces using visualizations and reanalyses of real-world data.
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Does Corruption Information Inspire the Fight or Quash the Hope? A Field Experiment in Mexico on Voter Turnout, Choice, and Party Identification

TL;DR: In this article, the authors provide experimental evidence that such information not only decreases incumbent party support in local elections in Mexico, but also decreases voter turnout and support for the challenger party, as well as erodes partisan attachments.
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How Much Should We Trust Estimates from Multiplicative Interaction Models? Simple Tools to Improve Empirical Practice

TL;DR: This paper found that a large portion of findings across all political science subfields based on interaction models are fragile and model dependent, and proposed a checklist of simple diagnostics to assess the validity of these assumptions and offer flexible estimation strategies that allow for nonlinear interaction effects.
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Transparency, Protest, and Autocratic Instability

TL;DR: In this article, the authors examine the effect of a specific form of transparency, the disclosure of economic data by the government, on citizen belief formation, and consequently on collective mobilization and find empirical support for these claims.
Journal ArticleDOI

Democratic Authoritarianism: Origins and Effects

TL;DR: The literature suggests that authoritarian regimes adopt and utilize nominally democratic institutions to augment their strength through five main mechanisms: signaling, information acquisition, patronage distribution, monitoring, and credible commitment as discussed by the authors.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

Congressional Oversight Overlooked: Police Patrols versus Fire Alarms

TL;DR: The authors argue that Congress does not neglect its oversight responsibility, and that what appears to be a neglect of oversight really is the rational preference for one form of oversight over another form of police-patrol oversight.
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Incumbent performance and electoral control

John Ferejohn
- 01 Jan 1986 - 
TL;DR: In the pure theory of electoral competition, citizens compare the platforms of the candidates and vote for the one whose platform is preferred as discussed by the authors. But these models have another feature that is quite as disturbing as their instability.
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The Control of Politicians: An Economic Model

TL;DR: In this article, the authors apply economic theory to an analysis of behavior in the public sector, focusing on the division of interest between the public and its political representatives, where the public officeholder is assumed to act to advance his own interests, and these interests do not coincide automatically with those of his constituents.
ReportDOI

Equilibrium Political Budget Cycles

TL;DR: In this article, an equilibrium theory for the political budget cycle is proposed, and the welfare implications of proposals to mitigate the cycle and the effects of altering the electoral structure are considered.
Journal ArticleDOI

A free press is bad news for corruption

TL;DR: The authors found evidence of a significant relationship between more press freedom and less corruption in a large cross-section of countries and suggested that the direction of causation runs from higher press freedom to lower corruption.
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