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7 - Moving Toward Accountability? Comparative Perspectives and Policy Implications

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  05 October 2014

Rebecca Weitz-Shapiro
Affiliation:
Brown University, Rhode Island
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Summary

The third-wave transitions to democracy in Latin America were met with optimism that governments in the region would become more accountable to their citizens, as well as trepidation that these transitions might collapse in the face of military coups. In most of these countries, democracy's long endurance has allayed fears of the latter. Questions about the quality of these now not-so-young democracies, however, remain extremely relevant. Scholars, citizens, and other observers increasingly recognize that it is no straightforward task to make democracy work well, and that there may be significant variation in government performance even within a single country. In spite of this growing concern with the quality of subnational democracy, our understanding of why, within a democracy, some governments perform better than others remains incomplete.

In this book, I use the case of clientelism both to illustrate the breadth of variation in government quality and to test a theory of what explains improvements in local government performance. Clientelism undermines ties of accountability between citizens and politicians. It narrows the issue space about which clients make political decisions to the question of access to particularistic goods; in doing so, it insulates politicians from the need to be responsive to the full potential range of citizen preferences. Although the costs of clientelism to accountability are widely recognized, those costs may be unevenly distributed across a country's territory.

Type
Chapter
Information
Curbing Clientelism in Argentina
Politics, Poverty, and Social Policy
, pp. 150 - 166
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Print publication year: 2014

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