Publication
1 Jun 2009
This paper presents experimental results that help to explain why ethnicity appears to have little political salience in Mali. Despite an ethnically heterogeneous population, ethnic identity is a poor predictor of vote choice in Mali and parties do not form along ethnic lines. The authors argue that the cross-cutting ties afforded by an informal institution called 'cousinage' helps explain this phenomenon. Both co-ethnic and cousinage alliances enhance the credibility of politicians' policy promises, yet neither dimension of identity becomes dominant as a basis for vote choice due to their cross-cutting nature.
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English (PDF, 45 pages, 422 KB) |
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Author | Thad Dunning, Lauren Harrison |
Series | Leitner Program Working Papers |
Issue | 4 |
Publisher | Leitner Program in International & Comparative Political Economy |
Copyright | © 2009 Leitner Program |