Publication

Dec 2004

The author claims that the academic literature that might help policy-makers shape appropriate foreign assistance programs remains underdeveloped, in that it lacks strong behavioral foundations or explanations of why people act the way they do. This paper argues that the process of democratic consolidation requires a transition from clientelistic to contractual exchange relationships. Without that transition, efforts to promote democratic consolidation are unlikely to succeed.

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Author Ethan Kapstein
Series CGD Working Papers
Issue 52
Publisher Center for Global Development (CGD)
Copyright © 2004 Center for Global Development (CGD)
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