Lecture: Defamation or Dirty Laundry? Income Inequality Encourages Politicians to Conceal Vote-Buying

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Location: Hesburgh Center for International Studies, C103

The Kellogg Institute for International Studies welcomes Dan Pemstein, Assistant Professor of Political Science at North Dakota State University as he presents “Defamation or Dirty Laundry? Income Inequality Encourages Politicians to Conceal Vote-Buying”.

When do elected politicians attempt to censor information about their vote-buying efforts? We develop a formal model that explains how variation in income within democracies affects politicians’ incentives, both to buy votes, and to limit public access to information about such activity. We test the model’s predictions using clientelism and censorship data from a variety of sources, including the Varieties of Democracy project and internet firm transparency reports.

Dan specializes in comparative legislative studies, political economy, and methodology, with research focusing on how career ambition, party organization, and inter-institutional bargaining constraints interact to determine legislative behavior and policy outcomes in the European Union.