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Opportunities and Choices During Environmental Licensing: Community Participation in Latin America’s Extractive Sectors Studies in Comparative International Development (IF 2.591) Pub Date : 2024-02-24 Maiah Jaskoski
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Permissive Regulations and Forest Protection Studies in Comparative International Development (IF 2.591) Pub Date : 2024-02-23 Candelaria Garay
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Citizen-Led Environmental Governance: Regulating Urban Wetlands in South America Studies in Comparative International Development (IF 2.591) Pub Date : 2024-02-13
Abstract Wetlands provide ecosystem services such as flood protection, improved water quality, and wildlife habitat, but are under attack in urban land-use conflicts in the Global South. This article presents two cases of local wetlands governance conflicts in Colombia (Humedal la Conejera, Bogotá, Cundinamarca) and Argentina (Laguna de Rocha, Esteban Echeverría, Gran Buenos Aires) to illustrate divergent
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Civil Society Under Attack: The Consequences for Horizontal Accountability Institutions Studies in Comparative International Development (IF 2.591) Pub Date : 2024-02-01 Hannah Smidt, Jessica Johansson, Thomas Richter
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Development Elites, Impacted Communities, and Environmental Governance in Latin America Studies in Comparative International Development (IF 2.591) Pub Date : 2024-01-13 Moisés Arce, Maiah Jaskoski
This special issue examines environmental governance, conceptualized as environmental protections, support for sustainable development, and the regulation of large-scale development projects. Through analysis of dynamics during the commodities super-cycle of the 2000s–2010s, contributors explore the multifaceted ways that societal actors interact with the state to support, oppose, or modify environmental
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Between Regulation and Practice: Situated Pesticide Governance in Argentina Studies in Comparative International Development (IF 2.591) Pub Date : 2024-01-13 Pablo Lapegna, Johana Kunin, Tomás Palmisano
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Subnational Oil Resource Governance after the Commodity Boom: The Making and Limitations of Peru’s Closing Development Gaps Plan Studies in Comparative International Development (IF 2.591) Pub Date : 2024-01-13 Moises Arce, Omar Awapara Franco, Roger Merino
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Incumbent Responses to Armed Groups in Nigeria and Kenya Studies in Comparative International Development (IF 2.591) Pub Date : 2024-01-12 Megan Turnbull
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Fertility Has Been Framed: Why Family Planning Is Not a Silver Bullet for Sustainable Development Studies in Comparative International Development (IF 2.591) Pub Date : 2023-12-23 Leigh Senderowicz, Taryn Valley
High fertility and population growth have been framed as villains in global health and development. Inspired by neo-Malthusian concerns around resource depletion, scholars have argued that fertility reduction through increased contraceptive use is necessary to protect maternal health, prevent environmental disaster, and promote economic prosperity throughout the Global South. Despite substantial critique
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Unlocking the Potential of Participatory Planning: How Flexible and Adaptive Governance Interventions Can Work in Practice Studies in Comparative International Development (IF 2.591) Pub Date : 2023-12-21 Kamran Hakiman, Ryan Sheely
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“No se Cuidan (They Don’t Take Care of Themselves)”: Reframing Reproductive Rights as Contraceptive Responsibility in Post-ICPD Mexico Studies in Comparative International Development (IF 2.591) Pub Date : 2023-12-01 Lydia Zacher Dixon
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Universal Health Coverage with Private Options: The Politics of Turkey’s 2008 Health Reform Studies in Comparative International Development (IF 2.591) Pub Date : 2023-11-15 Tim Dorlach, Oya Yeğen
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Dependency, Capacity, and Agency: Austerity and Leadership Failures in Brazil’s Homegrown COVID-19 Vaccine Efforts Studies in Comparative International Development (IF 2.591) Pub Date : 2023-11-08 Matthew B. Flynn, Elize Massard da Fonseca
Differential access to life-saving COVID-19 vaccines reveals the inequitable distribution of wealth and power in the global system. While several countries have developed homegrown vaccines to avoid being priced out of markets dominated by transnational drug companies, Brazil—a country with a significant research and pharmaceutical base—lagged behind those of other middle-income countries. Why? This
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Subsidy Entrepreneurship and a Culture of Rent-Seeking in Singapore’s Developmental State Studies in Comparative International Development (IF 2.591) Pub Date : 2023-11-03 Bryan Cheang
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Elections and Corruption: Incentives to Steal or Incentives to Invest? Studies in Comparative International Development (IF 2.591) Pub Date : 2023-11-03 Mihály Fazekas, Olli Hellmann
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Does Democracy Matter for Lifespan Inequalities? Regime Type and Premature Mortality by Sex Studies in Comparative International Development (IF 2.591) Pub Date : 2023-10-11 Ana Ortiz Salazar, Javier Rodríguez, Rena Salayeva, Melissa Rogers
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Global Health Diplomacy and Commodified Health Care: Health Tourism in Malaysia and Thailand Studies in Comparative International Development (IF 2.591) Pub Date : 2023-10-02 Reya Farber, Abigail Taylor
National governments have reinvigorated health tourism since COVID-19 by promoting health and medical technologies that target global health goals set by the World Health Organization. How do state efforts to address economic crisis through health tourism commodify niche health interventions, and what are the effects of such strategies? Health tourism is a form of global health diplomacy, in which
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Toward Transnational Feminist Methodologies in Global Health: Critical Ethnographies of HIV and Abortion Studies in Comparative International Development (IF 2.591) Pub Date : 2023-10-02 Siri Suh, Gowri Vijayakumar
Unlike prevailing research methodologies in the interdisciplinary field of global health, feminist methodologies allow researchers to unsettle the premises and assumptions of the field. This paper describes how we mobilize transnational feminist ethnography in our research on HIV in India and postabortion care in Senegal. Transnational feminist perspectives enable us to re-embed HIV prevention and
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Social Inclusion Among People with Mobility Limitations: Theorizing Disability Regimes in the Global South Studies in Comparative International Development (IF 2.591) Pub Date : 2023-09-26 Shane D. Burns, David F. Warner
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Biomedical and Spiritual Approaches to Mental Health in Tanzania: How Power and the Struggle for Public Authority Shaped Care Studies in Comparative International Development (IF 2.591) Pub Date : 2023-09-20 Amy S. Patterson
Roughly 80 percent of people with mental illness live in low- and middle-income countries (LMIC). This inductive analysis examines the ways power and the struggle for public authority affect mental health care in the LMIC of Tanzania. It investigates two mental health approaches: the biomedical approach, backed by state actors and donors and manifest in psychotropic medications, therapy, and/or hospitalization
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Testing the Drivers of Corporate Environmentalism in Vietnam Studies in Comparative International Development (IF 2.591) Pub Date : 2023-09-19 Edmund J. Malesky, Quynh Nguyen
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Economic Insecurity and Voter Attitudes about Currency Crises Studies in Comparative International Development (IF 2.591) Pub Date : 2023-08-22 Selim Erdem Aytaç, David Steinberg
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Avoiding the Political Resource Curse: Evidence from a Most-Likely Case Studies in Comparative International Development (IF 2.591) Pub Date : 2023-08-14 Moritz Schmoll, Geoffrey Swenson
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Exit or Voice? Corruption Perceptions and Emigration Studies in Comparative International Development (IF 2.591) Pub Date : 2023-05-09 Benjamin Helms
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Harmony or Cacophony? A Disaggregated Analysis of Aid Fragmentation Studies in Comparative International Development (IF 2.591) Pub Date : 2023-04-13 Ruth D. Carlitz, Sebastian Ziaja
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Remittances and Revenue in Latin America, 1990–2017 Studies in Comparative International Development (IF 2.591) Pub Date : 2023-03-23 Michael D. Tyburski
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Post-neoliberal Populism in Latin America and Eastern Europe: Recognizing Family Resemblance Studies in Comparative International Development (IF 2.591) Pub Date : 2023-03-21 Binio S. Binev
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Resilience to Shrinking as a Catch-Up Strategy: a Comparison of Brazil and Indonesia, 1964–2019 Studies in Comparative International Development (IF 2.591) Pub Date : 2023-03-17 Tobias Axelsson, Igor Martins
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The Electoral Legacies of Civil War Violence: Theory and Evidence from a Maoist-affected State in India Studies in Comparative International Development (IF 2.591) Pub Date : 2023-02-18 Subhasish Ray, Suman Nath
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Can Partial Growth Coalitions Build Pathways Out of the Middle-Income Trap? The Case of Querétaro, México Studies in Comparative International Development (IF 2.591) Pub Date : 2023-02-10 Alberto Fuentes, Seth Pipkin
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Et Tu, Brute? Wealth Inequality and the Political Economy of Authoritarian Replacement Studies in Comparative International Development (IF 2.591) Pub Date : 2023-02-06 Joan C. Timoneda
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Why Are Firms in High-income Economies More Productive than in Middle-income Economies? Decomposing the Firm Labor Productivity Gap Studies in Comparative International Development (IF 2.591) Pub Date : 2023-01-21 Mohammad Amin, Asif M. Islam, Usman Khalid
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Jumpstarting Ideological Alignments in Clientelist Party Systems: Evidence from Honduras’s 2009 Coup Studies in Comparative International Development (IF 2.591) Pub Date : 2023-01-17 Lucas Perelló, Patricio Navia
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The Role of Historical Malaria in Institutions and Contemporary Economic Development Studies in Comparative International Development (IF 2.591) Pub Date : 2022-11-23 Elizabeth Gooch, Jorge Martinez-Vazquez, Bauyrzhan Yedgenov
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The Impact of Institutional Formation on Firms’ Strategic Choices in Knowledge Development, Absorptive Capacity and Vertical Integration Studies in Comparative International Development (IF 2.591) Pub Date : 2022-11-18 Pradeep Kanta Ray, Anton Klarin, Sangeeta Ray
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State of the Fiscal Contract in Lagos’ Informal Settlements Studies in Comparative International Development (IF 2.591) Pub Date : 2022-10-29 Leah R. Rosenzweig, Nicole E. Wilson
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Transformation Towards Renewable Energy Systems: Evaluating the Role of Development Financing Institutions Studies in Comparative International Development (IF 2.591) Pub Date : 2022-10-04 Jiajun Xu, Kevin P. Gallagher
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Inequality and Immigration Policy Studies in Comparative International Development (IF 2.591) Pub Date : 2022-09-29 Margaret E. Peters, Adrian J. Shin
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Effect of Participation and Alignment on the Sustainability of Development Aid Output: Evidence from a Field Experiment in Uganda Studies in Comparative International Development (IF 2.591) Pub Date : 2022-09-24 Satoru Mikami
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Decentralization and Pro-poor Participation in Ghana: Unmasking the Barriers to Inclusive Grassroots Development Studies in Comparative International Development (IF 2.591) Pub Date : 2022-09-08 Seregious Be-ere
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Electoral Politics, Fiscal Policy, and the Resource Curse Studies in Comparative International Development (IF 2.591) Pub Date : 2022-09-05 Iasmin Goes
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The Complex Imprint of Foreign Rule: Tracking Differential Legacies along the Administrative Hierarchy Studies in Comparative International Development (IF 2.591) Pub Date : 2022-08-05 Jan P. Vogler
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The Political Economy of Intermediate Capital Account Regimes: a Fuzzy-Set Qualitative Comparative Analysis Studies in Comparative International Development (IF 2.591) Pub Date : 2022-06-27 Pedro Perfeito da Silva
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How Climate Change Affects Organized Criminal Group Behavior Studies in Comparative International Development (IF 2.591) Pub Date : 2022-06-22 Lucía Tiscornia
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Ethnic Polarization and Human Development: The Conditional Effects of Minority Language Recognition Studies in Comparative International Development (IF 2.591) Pub Date : 2022-06-17 Zsombor Csata, Roman Hlatky, Amy H. Liu
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Empowering Inclusion? The Two Sides of Party-Society Linkages in Latin America Studies in Comparative International Development (IF 2.591) Pub Date : 2022-06-14 Santiago Anria, Juan Bogliaccini
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Take or Reject State Power? The Dual Dilemma for Teachers’ Unions in Brazil and Mexico Studies in Comparative International Development (IF 2.591) Pub Date : 2022-06-08 Rebecca Tarlau
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Reconsidering the Rubber Stamp Thesis: A Consolidation Theory of Oil Expropriations and Legislatures in Party-based Autocracies Studies in Comparative International Development (IF 2.591) Pub Date : 2022-05-16 Paul Schuler, Chad Westerland
Growing conventional wisdom suggests that authoritarian legislatures prevent oil nationalizations in party-based regimes. However, country scholars and media outlets remain skeptical. We develop a theory aligning with the skeptics. We argue that oil expropriations and legislative closures are endogenous to the process of the consolidation of party-based autocracies. New authoritarian parties close
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Extending a Hand: Corruption and Solidarity with the Less Privileged Domestically and Beyond Studies in Comparative International Development (IF 2.591) Pub Date : 2022-05-13 Fredrik G. Malmberg
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Correction to: The Perils of Parliamentarism: Executive Selection Systems and Democratic Transitions from Electoral Authoritarianism Studies in Comparative International Development (IF 2.591) Pub Date : 2022-04-28 Masaaki Higashijima,Yuko Kasuya
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The Perils of Parliamentarism: Executive Selection Systems and Democratic Transitions from Electoral Authoritarianism Studies in Comparative International Development (IF 2.591) Pub Date : 2022-02-23 Masaaki Higashijima, Yuko Kasuya
Why are some electoral authoritarian regimes immune to democratization for decades while others not? This article explores the impact of executive selection systems on democratic transitions from electoral authoritarianism. We argue that under electoral authoritarian regimes, Parliament-based systems permit dictators to more effectively deter democratization compared to Presidential systems. This is
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Correction to: The Dollar Cycle of International Development, 1973–2017 Studies in Comparative International Development (IF 2.591) Pub Date : 2021-12-09 Ho‑fung Hung,Mingtang Liu
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The Incoherence of Institutional Reform: Decentralization as a Structural Solution to Immediate Political Needs Studies in Comparative International Development (IF 2.591) Pub Date : 2021-11-09 Jean-Paul Faguet, Mahvish Shami
Institutional reforms are structural changes in the rules and norms of authority, with effects that are long-term and unpredictable on government, politics, and society. But leaders may undertake them to solve unrelated, discrete, short-term political problems. Understanding the latter is key to understanding the characteristics of many real reforms, and hence their fate. We introduce the concept of
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Climbing to the Top? How Globalized Competition for Capital Affects Judicial Independence Studies in Comparative International Development (IF 2.591) Pub Date : 2021-07-29 Chen, Guorong, Wang, Zhiyuan
In this article, building on the globalized competition-driven policy convergence literature, we argue that states improve judicial independence when their competitors for foreign direct investment (FDI) have granted more autonomy to their own courts. We also argue that this effect is stronger in more democratic regimes. We finally argue that non-high-income nations are more likely to react positively
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Electoral Volatility in Latin America, 1932–2018 Studies in Comparative International Development (IF 2.591) Pub Date : 2021-07-21 Scott Mainwaring, Yen-Pin Su
This paper examines electoral volatility in Latin America from 1932 to 2018, covering both presidential and lower chamber elections. The paper makes two contributions. First, we present a new, carefully documented dataset about electoral volatility and the vote share of new parties. Scholars interested in both subjects will be able to use the data to explore a wide range of issues. We contribute to
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Defense Sector Politics Studies in Comparative International Development (IF 2.591) Pub Date : 2021-07-16 Collin Grimes
Ownership and control of defense industrial firms affords the military power, autonomy, and a claim to economic rents. Why do some countries succeed at shifting some or all such firms from military to civilian ownership and control, while others do not? I argue that differing configurations of relative civilian and military coalitional and institutional strength contribute to outcomes. Civilian and
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Donor-Funded Women’s Empowerment in Tajikistan: Trajectories of Women’s NGOs and Changing Attitudes to the International Agenda Studies in Comparative International Development (IF 2.591) Pub Date : 2021-07-13 Karolina Kluczewska
This article investigates internationally funded women’s empowerment initiatives in Tajikistan. Following the collapse of the Soviet Union in 1991 and the subsequent Tajik civil war (1992–1997), this newly independent, Muslim-majority country has experienced an influx of foreign aid, including in the field of women’s rights. Drawing on extensive fieldwork, the article analyzes the growth and diversification
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When Do Strong Parties “Throw the Bums Out”? Competition and Accountability in South African Candidate Nominations Studies in Comparative International Development (IF 2.591) Pub Date : 2021-07-09 Evan Lieberman, Philip Martin, Nina McMurry
Existing accounts of centralized candidate selection argue that party elites tend to ignore constituent preferences in favor of internal party concerns, leading to accountability deficits. Yet this claim has been largely assumed rather than demonstrated. We provide the first detailed empirical analysis of the relationship between constituent opinion and candidate nominations in the absence of party
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Populism and the Past: Restoring, Retaining, and Redeeming the Nation Studies in Comparative International Development (IF 2.591) Pub Date : 2021-07-05 Iza Ding, Dan Slater, Huseyin Zengin
Populism and nationalism have been described as major threats to democracy. But ambiguities linger over their conceptual boundaries and overlaps. This article develops a typology of nationalist narratives to historically situate the recent global rise of populist nationalism. Specifically, we identify three common types of historical experience with empire that have shaped contemporary expressions
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Populism and Hindu Nationalism in India Studies in Comparative International Development (IF 2.591) Pub Date : 2021-07-03 Ashutosh Varshney, Srikrishna Ayyangar, Siddharth Swaminathan
This article presents findings from the first-ever survey of populist attitudes in India. Historically, the Indian usage of the concept of populism was mostly confined to the fiscal handouts of governments for the lower-income groups, something that is viewed as part of left-wing populism elsewhere in the world. The idea of right-wing populism, which equates popular will with the interests of the