Publication

Oct 2007

In order to better understand clientelism, this article measures the size and structure of political networks in Argentina and Chile. It assesses whether parties have a large enough supply of patrons, bureaucrats, activists and volunteers, which would allow party leaders to properly invest particularistic resources among adequately chosen voters. The authors take advantage of new developments in network analysis to measure the size of hard-to-count populations and to explore network structure in survey data. Using information about the ideological and physical proximity of voters to political networks, they estimate individual-level vote choices.

Download English (PDF, 48 pages, 375 KB)
Author Ernesto Calvo, Maria Victoria Murillo
Series Leitner Program Working Papers
Issue 18
Publisher Leitner Program in International & Comparative Political Economy
Copyright © 2007 Leitner Program
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