Monday, June 9, 2014

Stokes 2006


Do Informal Rules Make Democracy Work? Accounting for Accountability in Argentina" Susan C. Stokes 125-139

in editors Helmke, Gretchen, and Steven Levitsky 2006. Informal institutions and democracy: lessons from Latin America. Baltimore: Johns Hopkins University Press.

  • likens some informal rules of democracy to language rules, where we learn to follow them before we learn what they actually are  (125)
  • two central premises of the chapter:
    • the way people vote in elections is rule-governed, and individuals rules for making voting decisions should be taken seriously (126)
    • voters decision rules are grammatical: they are known and diffused through social mechanisms and rarely discussed openly, but are still not violated
  • informal institutions and rules do not just describe what people do, but also what the expect other people to do (128)
  • In Argentina, author suggests, democratic institutions are weak (128-129)
    • Argentine democracy actually functions better in places where informal rules enforce accountability (129)
    • people in places where democracy works pretty well display a heightened appreciation for mechanism of accountability AND expect others to follow decision-rules that make accountability possible (mar del Plata)
    • in clientelisitic areas, people expect others to vote in ways that support clientelism (BA, Córdoba, Misiones)
  • uses survey evidence
  • "Expectations of accountability, when they do occur in Argentina, focus both on formal institutions and on informal rules and behaviors." (131, emphasis added)
    • in places where democracy works, voters vote on whether a politician was accountable and expect others to do the same (132)
  • none of this comes from any inherent belief (in Mar del Plata) that people are more trustworthy (135) or because they think perpetrators will be caught (136) but because they think people will lose support, voters, whatever if they aren't accountable (136-137)
  • Authors hunch: beliefs in accountability are both a cause and a consequence of well-functioning democracy (138-139)

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