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Impact Factor:1.488 | Ranking:Political Science 27 out of 157 | 5-Year Impact Factor:1.972 | 5-Year Ranking:Political Science 26 out of 157
Source:2013 Journal Citation Reports® (Thomson Reuters, 2014)

States and strategy in new federal democracies: Competitiveness and intra-party resource allocation in Mexico

  1. Imke Harbers i.harbers{at}uva.nl
    1. University of Amsterdam, The Netherlands

Abstract

A growing body of research demonstrates that parties are vital for the health of democracy. While party activities are therefore increasingly supported by direct public subsidies, we know relatively little about the ways in which parties spend this money. Using an original dataset of intra-party cash transfers, this article examines resource allocation in three major Mexican parties. The analysis demonstrates that parties’ spending patterns differ. Decentralization, which has increased the power and prestige of subnational office, prompts all parties to focus spending on states holding local elections. Parties with a regionalized support base, however, invest primarily in states where they are competitive. This tendency to favour party strongholds has important implications for party system development, particularly for party system nationalization, as well as for emerging work on subnational authoritarianism.

This Article

  1. Party Politics 1354068812458611
    All Versions of this Article:
    1. Version of Record - Oct 31, 2014
    2. OnlineFirst Version of Record - Sep 23, 2014
    3. current version image indicatorOnlineFirst Version of Record - Sep 20, 2012
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