Electoral Institutions and Identity Based Clientelism in Jordan

Author:

Kao Kristen1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Political Science, University of Gothenburg, Gothenburg, Sweden

Abstract

In contexts where social cleavages are universally salient, how can political alliances across social identity groups be forged? A wealth of research examines the effects of either electoral rules or social identity on electoral behavior, but the interplay between these two factors is understudied. This article leverages original datasets of tribal voting coalitions, parliamentarian constituent casework logs, and a national survey in Jordan to demonstrate how institutions interact with social identity to shape distributive politics. Within single non-transferable vote districts (SNTV), representatives win their seats based on tribal support and practice tribal favoritism in service provision. On the contrary, elected officials in single member plurality districts (SMDs) cobble together more diverse coalitions to win their seats and distribute state benefits more evenly between in-group and out-group members. Bolstering these findings, data from a 2014 nationwide survey show that a history of having tribal connections with parliamentarians’ augments voter turnout in SNTV districts, whereas it has no relationship with voter turnout in SMDs. This article offers an understanding of why politicians build electoral coalitions and distribute clientelistic benefits within or across social identity groups with important implications for the consideration of electoral institutional design in developing countries.

Funder

University of California, Los Angeles

American Center of Oriental Research

National Science Foundation

The Program on Governance and Local Development

Boren Fellowship Institute of International Education

Publisher

SAGE Publications

Subject

Sociology and Political Science

Reference51 articles.

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