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Comparative Political Studies
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The Influence of Party Systems on Citizens’ Perceptions of Corruption and Electoral Response in Latin America

Charles L. Davis

University of Kentucky

Roderic Ai Camp

Claremont McKenna College

Kenneth M. Coleman

University of Michigan

This study examines how different party systems in Latin America affect the capability of opposition parties to use public concerns about political corruption for electoral mobilization. Opposition partisanship is more strongly linked to perceptions of corruption in the ideologically polarized party system of Chile than in the hegemonic party system then in decline in Mexico or in the centrist two-party system of Costa Rica. However, the capability of opposition parties in all three party systems to mobilize electoral support among voters dissatisfied with corruption is weakened by the tendency of these politically alienated citizens to withdrawfrom all types of political involvement. Implications of the findings for redressing problems of political corruption through the electoral process and for a deepening of democracy in Latin America are discussed.

Key Words: political corruption • perceived corruption • opposition artisanship • electoral mobilization

Comparative Political Studies, Vol. 37, No. 6, 677-703 (2004)
DOI: 10.1177/0010414004265879


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