Democracy, Clientelism, and Civil SocietyLuis Roniger, Ayşe Güneş-Ayata |
Contents
Premodern Modern Postmodern | 19 |
Peasants Patrons and the State in Northern Portugal | 29 |
Roots and Trends of Clientelism in Turkey | 49 |
Peasant Politics | 65 |
Constitutionalism and Clientelism in Italy Carlo Rossetti | 87 |
Clientelism and the Process of Political Democratization | 105 |
The Dynamics of Change | 121 |
Common terms and phrases
abstentionism administrative agrarian reform Aguaril ANUC autonomy became Bogotá Boissevain brokers bureaucracy Cambridge central Chicago civil society Clark clien clientelistic networks clientelistic politics clientelistic relations clients coalition Colombia constitutional corruption council democracy democratic economic Eisenstadt elections emerged established Estado Novo ethnic exchange factions families Family Compact favors fiscal forms framework groups ideology important individual institutions interests Italy KMT clientelism land leaders Liberal Likud loyalty major Mayor ment mobilization modern municipal national elites nomenklatura Nova Scotia officials Ontario organization participation particularistic patron-client relations patrons peasant movement percent periphery policies Political Clientelism political corruption political culture political parties political system population province regime regional relationships role Roniger rules rural S. N. Eisenstadt sectors Selima social strategy structure Studies Sucre Taiwan telism tion traditional universalistic University Press Upper Canada urban village votes Zamosc