ELITE Elite Politics in Electoral Autocracies

Photo: Felix Mittermeier/Unsplash

Duration:
08.01.2024–07.01.2026

Dictators are dependent on a loyal coalition of supporters within the ruling elite. This project seeks to answer how elite defection and divisons affect regime stability and democratization.

Project Overview

Today most dictators exploit democratic institutions such as multiparty elections or legislatures to cover their autocratic rule.

To carry out autocratic rule, dictators need a loyal coalition of politicians to gather supporters, advance policies and win elections. While this loyalty is central to regime survival, elite divisions within authoritarian governments can induce political change.

Yet, what type of divisions matter and whether such change will be democratizing are unclear. Defectors might have the resources to embolden pro-democracy groups, but they may also face repression, worsening democratization prospects. What type of divisions within the ruling elite can weaken modern autocracies? What are the mechanisms that underpin the relationship between defections and democratization?

Methods and data

ELITE offers a new theoretical framework, innovative data, and empirical research to identify and explain the strains and disruptions within authoritarian governments that induce democratization. It develops a theory of the elite origins of regime (in)stability, focusing on divisions within the ruling elite.

ELITE builds a novel dataset on political elites’ resources and dissent strategies in 28 prominent electoral autocracies—today's most common form of autocracy. Cutting-edge mixed methods test why and how elite divisions strengthen antiregime groups and weaken leaders' tools to stay in power. Findings will inform academic and policy debates on the processes that weaken modern dictatorships.

Participants

Funding

Funded by the European Union

Funded by the European Union. Views and opinions expressed are however those of the author(s) only and do not necessarily reflect those of the European Union or the European Research Council Executive Agency. Neither the European Union nor the granting authority can be held responsible for them.

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Published Apr. 17, 2024 12:57 PM - Last modified Apr. 17, 2024 1:25 PM