Analytic authoritarianism and Nigeria |
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Authors: | A. Carl LeVan |
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Affiliation: | Comparative and Regional Studies, School of International Service, American University, Washington, DC 20016, USA |
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Abstract: | Despite two decades of democratisation and some recent liberalisation in North Africa, dictatorships linger around the world. New research on comparative authoritarianism questions personal rule and studies a range of dependent variables, such as why dictators sometimes provide public goods. This ‘analytic authoritarian’ literature emphasises collective governance and explores the institutional basis of policy control. Nigeria's military regimes between 1966 and 1998 provide examples of how military factions and subnational actors can impose transaction costs on authoritarian policy processes. These alternative centres of policy control limited the ability of dictators to unilaterally advance their policy preferences on questions relating to federalism and transition plans. The article concludes by linking this analysis to Nigeria's lingering legacies of authoritarianism and the institutional basis of its 1999 transition. |
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Keywords: | authoritarianism Nigeria democratisation African politics veto players |
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