Third-Party Actors and the Success of Democracy: How Electoral Commissions, Courts, and Observers Shape Incentives for Electoral Manipulation and Post-Election Protests
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Chernykh, Svitlana
Svolik, Milan W.
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University of Chicago Press
Abstract
When and how do third-party actors—most prominently electoral commissions, courts, and observers—contribute to
the integrity of the electoral process? We approach these questions by studying how third-party actors shape politicians’
incentives to comply with the outcomes of elections. Third parties are most beneficial in close elections, when the threat
of a post-election confrontation alone fails to ensure self-enforcing compliance with election outcomes. Our analysis
highlights that third parties do not need to be impartial to be politically consequential, that it is third parties with a
moderate pro-incumbent bias that will be acceptable to not only the opposition but also the incumbent, and that
incumbents adopt politically consequential third-party institutions when they fear that their narrow victory might
result in a costly post-election confrontation. Extensions of our model address the role of repression and urban bias,
examine the differences between commissions, courts, and observers, and clarify not only the potential but also the
limits to institutional solutions to the problem of electoral compliance in new and transitioning democracies.
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Journal of Politics
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Open Access
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