Against the Machine
Why Party Competition Disrupts Vote Buying
Format:Paperback
Publisher:Cambridge University Press
Publishing:31st Jul '26
£28.00
This title is due to be published on 31st July, and will be despatched as soon as possible.

A new theory of vote buying that paints an optimistic portrait of elections, voting, and accountability in new democracies.
Vote buying is believed to rot democracy's foundations, but evidence shows it rarely succeeds. This book presents a new theory explaining why vote buying typically fails and why it persists despite meager returns. The findings yield an optimistic portrait of elections, voting, and political accountability in new democracies.This book explains variations in the effectiveness of vote buying. Current theory assumes that vote buying is effective, rotting democracy's foundations. Yet, evidence shows that it rarely succeeds. Against the Machine presents a partisan competition theory to explain why buying vote choices is typically ineffective, the conditions under which it occasionally succeeds, and why it persists despite meager electoral returns. Competitive elections arm voters with the psychological wherewithal to resist the influence of electoral gifts, deprive political machines of the information they need to target compliant clients, and reinforce belief in ballot secrecy. The success or failure of vote buying thus relies more on the capacity of opposition parties to compete rather than the prowess of political machines. Against the Machine provides a new account of vote buying that paints a more optimistic portrait of elections, voter behavior, and the chances for political accountability in new democracies.
'While most accounts view clientelism as a vestige of authoritarianism or as evidence of weak democratic norms, Greene's Against the Machine demonstrates that political machines persist in vote-buying efforts despite their ineffectiveness because they lack clear evidence of failure, treating the practice as a hedge against uncertainty. Theoretically innovative and methodologically rigorous, it is an outstanding contribution to the study of clientelism, electoral behavior, and democratic accountability.' Gustavo A. Flores-Macías, Dean and Professor, University of Maryland, School of Public Policy
'This pathbreaking book overturns conventional wisdom and sheds new light on long-standing puzzles about political clientelism. With theoretical clarity and impressive evidence, Kenneth Greene shows how partisan competition arms voters and disrupts the mechanics of vote buying. A compelling, rigorously argued, and deeply important contribution-essential reading for anyone who cares about how democracy actually works across much of the world.' Noam Lupu, Associate Professor of Political Science and Associate Director of LAPOP Lab, Vanderbilt University
ISBN: 9781009776752
Dimensions: unknown
Weight: unknown
312 pages