Fuente: SAGE journals
International Political Science Review. Volume 39 Issue 1, January 2018
Special Issue: State capacity, elections and the resilience of authoritarian rule
Table of Contents
Special Issue: State capacity, elections and the resilience of authoritarian rule
Guest Editor: Olli Hellmann and Aurel Croissant
Introduction
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Introduction: State capacity and elections in the study of authoritarian regimesFirst Published December 28, 2017; pp. 3–16 |
Research Article
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State capacity and the resilience of electoral authoritarianism: Conceptualizing and measuring the institutional underpinnings of autocratic powerFirst Published May 20, 2017; pp. 17–32 |
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Electoral authoritarianism and economic controlFirst Published May 15, 2017; pp. 33–48 |
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Strong states, weak elections? How state capacity in authoritarian regimes conditions the democratizing power of electionsFirst Published June 7, 2017; pp. 49–66 |
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High capacity, low resilience: The ‘developmental’ state and military–bureaucratic authoritarianism in South KoreaFirst Published May 22, 2017; pp. 67–82 |
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Authoritarian elections, state capacity, and performance legitimacy: Phases of regime consolidation and decline in Suharto’s IndonesiaFirst Published June 21, 2017; pp. 83–96 |
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State and regime capacity in authoritarian elections: Egypt before the Arab springFirst Published May 16, 2017; pp. 97–113 |
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Electoral authoritarianism and weak states in Africa: The role of parties versus presidents in Tanzania and CameroonFirst Published May 16, 2017; pp. 114–129 |
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State capacity and regime resilience in Putin’s RussiaFirst Published December 28, 2017; pp. 130–143 |
Karl Deutsch Lecture
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Introduction to Rein Taagepera, ‘Science walks on two legs, but social sciences try to hop on one’First Published June 8, 2017; pp. 144–144 |
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Science walks on two legs, but social sciences try to hop on oneFirst Published June 8, 2017; pp. 145–159 |
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