研究会案内 イベント案内
第16回山川健次郎レクチャーシリーズ:Isabela Mares on Electoral Corruption and Clientelism ※開催中止
新型コロナウイルス感染症拡大防止のため、中止することになりました。何卒ご理解の程よろしくお願い申し上げます。
講演内容、スピーカー略歴等の詳細は以下の英文案内をご参照ください。
The speaker is Isabela Mares, Arnold Wolfers Professor of Political Science at Yale University.
VENUE; Collaboration Room 3 at Building 18, University of Tokyo, Komaba Campus
<https://www.c.u-tokyo.ac.jp/eng_site/info/about/visitors/maps-directions/campusmap.html>
In this talk, I report the results of several studies I conducted that use non-obtrusive survey techniques, such as list-experiments, to measure the presence of clientelistic strategies. I also show how a variety of other survey experiments can be used to measure voters' evaluation of candidates that use various forms of clientelism and help us understand why voters do not always sanction candidates that use illicit strategies.
2. Second Talk: "Democratization after Democratization: How European countries ended electoral corruption"
VENUE; Conference Room 1, ISS Building, University of Tokyo, Hongo Campus
<https://www.iss.u-tokyo.ac.jp/guide/index.html>
I study the introduction of multiple electoral reforms which include legislation that sought to limit vote-buying, lower the ability of candidates to politicize state resources, improve voting technology and protect voter autonomy as well as reforms that limited fraud. Taking advantage of newly digitized historical data, I examine the conditions under which electoral majorities supporting such reforms came about and the relative importance of economic and political changes for the formation of these coalitions favoring electoral change. I conclude by discussing the implications of these successful episodes of democratization of electoral practices for recent democracies today.
Arnold Wolfers Professor of Political Science
<https://politicalscience.yale.edu/people/isabela-mares>
l capacity development, social policy reforms in both developed and developing countries. She is the author of The Politics of Social Risk: Business and Welfare State Development (New York: Cambridge University Press), Taxation, Wage Bargaining and Unemployment (New York: Cambridge University Press); From Open Secrets to Secret Voting: The adoption of electoral reforms protecting voter autonomy (New York: Cambridge University Press) and Conditionality and Coercion: Electoral clientelism in Eastern Europe, co-authored with Lauren Young (forthcoming, Oxford University Press).
She is currently completing a book entitled Democratization after Democratization, which examines the adoption of electoral reforms limiting electoral irregularities in the Western World.
niversity in Budapest. She has held visiting appointments at the Center for the Study of
Democratic Politics at Princeton and the Russell Sage Foundation.