Democracy and Redistribution

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Format: Hardcover
Pub. Date: 2003-07-28
Publisher(s): Cambridge University Press
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Summary

When do countries democratize? What facilitates the survival of authoritarian regimes? What determines the occurrence of revolutions, often leading to left-wing dictatorships, such as the Soviet regime? Although a large literature has developed since Aristotle through contemporary political science to answer these questions, we still lack a convincing understanding of the process of political development. Employing analytical tools borrowed from game theory, Carles Boix offers a complete theory of political transitions, in which political regimes ultimately hinge on the nature of economic assets, their distribution among individuals, and the balance of power among different social groups. Backed up by detailed historical work and extensive statistical analysis that goes back to the mid-nineteenth century, this book explains why democracy emerged in classical Athens. It also discusses the early triumph of democracy in both nineteenth-century agrarian Norway, Switzerland and northeastern America and the failure in countries with a powerful landowning class.

Table of Contents

List of Figures viii
List of Tables x
Acknowledgments xiii
INTRODUCTION 1(18)
1 A THEORY OF POLITICAL TRANSITIONS 19(46)
APPENDIX 1.1 PROVING THE RESULTS OF THE INITIAL GAME
60(3)
APPENDIX 1.2 ALTERNATIVE EXPLANATIONS FOR THE DEVELOPMENT DEMOCRACY CORRELATION
63(2)
2 EMPIRICAL EVIDENCE 65(45)
APPENDIX 2.1 LIST OF POLITICAL REGIMES
98(12)
3 HISTORICAL EVIDENCE 110(20)
4 THEORETICAL EXTENSIONS: GROWTH, TRADE, POLITICAL INSTITUTIONS 130(41)
5 DEMOCRACY AND THE PUBLIC SECTOR 171(33)
6 THE STATE, THE THREAT OF EXPROPRIATION AND THE POSSIBILITY OF DEVELOPMENT 204(29)
7 CONCLUSIONS 233(8)
References 241(12)
Index 253

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