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Notas de lectura

Lecture Notes for GOVT 1313: Intro to Comparative Government

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These are my lecture notes for Intro to Comparative Government, also known as GOVT 1313 for Spring 2025. I got an A in the class and on the final. They also include section notes that discuss the readings for the week. I joined the class late, so some of the first couple of lectures are not included. Everything else is included.

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Subido en
7 de agosto de 2025
Número de páginas
36
Escrito en
2024/2025
Tipo
Notas de lectura
Profesor(es)
Thomas pepinsky
Contiene
Majority of classes except first couple, specific dates should be in pdf

Temas

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Status Not started
2/10: Political Regimes: Concepts and Typologies
2/19: Political Regimes: Origins and Transitions
2/26: Mass Politics and Political Behavior
3/3: Patterns of Democracy
3/5: Presidentialism v. Parliamentalism
3/10: Electoral Rules
3/12: Parties and Party Systems
3/14 Discussion Session
3/17: Pluralism, Corporatism, Populism, Intermediation
3/19: Nondemocratic Politics
3/21 Discussion Sections
3/24: Electoral Authoritarianism
4/7: Violence and Political Order
4/9: Civil War and Insurgency
4/11: Discussion Section
4/14: Social Movements and Contentious Politics
4/16: Categories and Identities
4/18: Discussion
4/21: Representation and Accountability
4/23: Clientelism and Corruption
4/25: Discussion Section
4/28: Political Economy
4/30: Globalization




2/10: Political Regimes: Concepts and Typologies
Federal state: states where most rights lie with small regions, other sovereignty delegated upwards

Unitary states: sovereignty is delegated down, federal government delegates power down




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, All states have national minorities, some suppress or ignore minority population, other accept

Regimes: fundamental rules and norms that determine how sovereign authority is obtained and exercized,
relatively durable

States: compulsory organizations that have a monopoly on the legitimate use of violence within a given
territory, most durable

Government: teams of people that evercise sovereign authority: less durable

Major distinction between regimes: how sovereign authority is obtained

Join party, win elections: emocracy, ex. Italy, Taiwan, Colombia, Ghana

Inhererit from parent/ancestor: monarchy, ex. Saudi Arabia, Brunei

Defeat current sovereign in battle: military regime, ex. Niger, Myanmar

Rise in bureacratic ranks: bureacratic regime, single-party regime, ex. China, Nicaragua

Many regimes can’t be determined into a single regime, may have multiple characteristics

Can’t determine regime through self-given title

North Korea most likely open succession monarchy, Kim Jong Un killed older brother

Dahl on democracy: more democratic regimes must give people power to organize and oppose, not just
organize

Magna carta: document signed in 1215 that established limits of kings authority over nobles, established
principal of limited government, gave freedom and liberty to citizens of England

Didn’t actually illustrate new rules, only reinforced old rules

Nobles and priest have more power, threat of force if king didn’t sign it, magna carta wasn’t actually
inforced for 400 years after

Egypt after Arab Spring: previous region, led by Hosni Mubarak, collapsed, democratization began

Elections happened, elected Mohamed Morsi, military didn’t like him, seemed like fair competitive
election

Seemed very democratic, change in political regime

Eventually overthrown by military coup led by Adbed Fattah el-Sisi, wrote new Constitution, returned
military control of Egypt

Rules are endogenous, regimes are exogenous

Endogenous: coming from within the system, exogenous: coming from external sources, outside of
the system

Prelim:

Tests on material all the way until the 19th

Mc, short answer, essay

More focused on lecture, still focus on reading

Mainly focused on main terms and concepts and ideas




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, Lectures: terms and how they are applied

Less competition over land in Africa→state capacity and state building looked different, state building
conflict more focused on concentrated land

Democracy is a system in which the ruling party is a representation of the people, who can be held accountable
for their actions, and where power is not monopolized by one group.


2/19: Political Regimes: Origins and Transitions
Prelim: 1. Multiple choice, 2. short answer (1 paragraph each, choose 4 out of 5), 3. Essay (4-5 paragraphs,
choose 1 prompts out of 3)

Who is pzeworski

Time: ⅓ of time for each section, spend approximately 30 seconds on each MC question

What is a political regime?

When regime dies, is replaced by another regime, death of one regime is birth of another regime

Preconditionists: often believe that certain beliefs or types of people more conducive to democracy, certain
ways of living that make democracy more likely

Possible preconditions: economic structure, religious makeup, political culture (culture of disagreement
necessary), geography

Believed for while that Christianity necessary for democracy, used U.K, France, and U.S

Eventually proven wrong by newer democratic states, then shifted focus onto Islam and how it is
incompatible with demcoracy

Political culture: Tocquevillian idea→democracy in America possible because government
modeled around town halls?

Geography: many beleive democracy only possible in small areas, such as small city-states, etc.

Others believe that democracy only capable in colder, inhospitable place because requires
people to work together to survive

History: need specific historical events to happen for democracy to be stable and enduring

For example, need to introduce public to political competition first, then expansion of
franchise, elite compete with each other first then exapdn political participation

Soft v. hard universalist

Hard: preconditions are wrong, believe any country can be democracy and existence of countries out of
preconditions disproves preconditions

Soft: some factors make democracy more likely, but doesn’t have to be undemocratic just because they
don’t have preconditions

Data findings

Correlation between GDP per capita and how democratic a country is

Dividing by world region, correlation only holds up well in Eastern Europe, post-USSR, and Latin
America, ME/North Africa and Sub-Saharan Africa don’t follow correlation at all




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, Dividing by colonization by west or not, larger correlation by countries never colonized by
western countries, smaller correlation in countries never colonized by west

Colonization has large impact on democracy

ethnic diversity/ethnic fractionalization (high fractionalization if there are many ethnic groups that
are very small, low fractionalization is monoethnic): weak negative correlation, larger ethnic
fractionalization less democratic, still weak

Economic equality: measured by share of income held by top 1% of wealth : not strong correlation
between economic inequality and democracy

Many argue that economic inequality causes disputes between rich and poor, unlikely to have
democracy

Large income inequality not same as GDP/wealth of country

How do we observe political regimes?



Where do political regimes come from?

Majority of data don’t support preconditionalist, democracy has risen in various countries, major support
would be relationship between GDP of country and amount of democracy, more wealthy countries are more
democratic

Can be evidence that economic development causes democracy

Prosperity causes democracy, democracy causes prosperity (democratic governments have better
resources for economic growth), or something else causes both?

Fourth interpretation of data: factors that cause country to be democratic different from factors that
help regime stay in power

Most democratic regimes don’t last long, but some last pretty long

Military regimes tend to not last very long

Single-party regimes can last longer, still pretty short

Not many monarchies, but can last pretty long

Conclusion: democracy lasts longer than dictatorships

Probability of democratic transition and income decile: poorer countries more likely to transition to
democracy, wealthy countries very unlikely to transition to democracy

Regime durability and GDP per capita

Democracies: wealthier countries are more durable, for democracies, wealth predicts stability

Other regimes: GDP cannot predict durability, monarchies has negative correlation between wealth and
stability

GDP doesn’t cause democracy, but can make democracy last long

Poor countries democratize: dont’ stay democratic for long time




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