Supporting Democratic Institutions and Clean and Peaceful Elections

Abstract

When political leaders are subject to few checks and balances in poor countries, they have the incentives and opportunities to distort elections through fraud and violence. The result is often poor economic policy, voter apathy, the entrenchment of vote rigging behaviour, divisive ethnic politics and, in some cases, electoral violence. iiG research shows that carefully constructed interventions can reduce violence, increase voter turnout, and limit the effectiveness of vote buying. Policy recommendations are made in this briefing.

Citation

iiG Briefing Paper 09, CSAE Economics Department, University of Oxford, Oxford, UK, 3 pp

Supporting Democratic Institutions and Clean and Peaceful Elections

Updates to this page

Published 1 January 2010