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The Electoral Consequences of Direct Political Action: Evidence from Brazil
Authors:David S. Brown  J. Christopher Brown  Maureen M. Donaghy
Affiliation:1. Associate professor of political science at the University of Colorado and a research associate at the Institute of Behavioral Science. dsbrown@colorado.edu;2. Associate professor of geography and environmental studies and director of the Environmental Studies Program at the University of Kansas. jcbrown2@ku.edu;3. Doctoral candidate in political science at the University of Colorado. Maureen.Donaghy@Colorado.EDU
Abstract:Democracy affords citizens the ability to influence policy through participation in elections and through direct political action. Though previous scholarship evaluates the impact each strategy has on outcomes, little if any work exists that examines how one strategy, direct action, affects success in the other, elections. This study analyzes the relationship between land occupations and the electoral success of the Workers' Party in Brazil between 1996 and 2006. It finds that the relationship varies in presidential and mayoral elections depending on income inequality and incumbency. Once the PT captures the presidential office in 2002, these effects disappear, suggesting that the effect of political protest also depends on who is in office.
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