Transparency and Stability

We revisit the theory that Hollyer, Rosendorff, and Vreeland use in their research program on transparency and political stability. We show that in a representative citizen setting and in their multi-citizen model, more transparency increases the likelihood of revolution if this likelihood is suffic...

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Veröffentlicht in:Quarterly journal of political science 2022-01, Vol.17 (1), p.121-139
Hauptverfasser: Shadmehr, Mehdi, Bernhardt, Dan
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container_title Quarterly journal of political science
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creator Shadmehr, Mehdi
Bernhardt, Dan
description We revisit the theory that Hollyer, Rosendorff, and Vreeland use in their research program on transparency and political stability. We show that in a representative citizen setting and in their multi-citizen model, more transparency increases the likelihood of revolution if this likelihood is sufficiently small, but reduces the likelihood of revolution if it is sufficiently large. Rather than coordination concerns, the mechanism driving this result reflects the logic of "gambling for resurrection": when you're ahead, don't give information, but when you're behind, gamble for resurrection by providing more information. Their model suggests that protest risk drives transparency, not the converse: regimes facing a low likelihood of revolution should reduce transparency, while those facing a high likelihood of revolution should raise transparency, generating a positive correlation between transparency and instability. Moreover, we show that in Hollyer et al.'s core models, a citizen's net payoff from revolting does not depend on either the citizen's private economic well-being, or the public economic situation: economic interest, either self-interest or sociotropic interest, is not itself an incentive to protest. Rather, the model is a sunspot game, with economic data playing the role of sunspots, which, by assumption, act as focal points for coordination.
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source Worldwide Political Science Abstracts; Now Publishers Journals
subjects Autocracy
Business, Economics and Politics
Citizens
Civil conflict
Collective action
Comparative politics
Coordination
Demonstrations & protests
Economic theory
Economic well being
Economics
Formal modelling
Gambling
Game theory
Microeconomics
Political economy
Political Science
Politics
Public economics
Self interest
Social movements
Stability
Strategic Behavior and the Environment
Transparency
Uncertainty
title Transparency and Stability
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