DOCSLIB.ORG
Explore
Sign Up
Log In
Upload
Search
Home
» Tags
» Client politics
Client politics
Daily Work/Homework – 10% Off Each Day Its Late
The Determinants of Local Leader Influence in Elections: a Lab-In-The
Varieties of Patron-Client State Relationship
CHAPTER 21 Environmental Policy
Informal Institutions and Comparative Politics: a Research Agenda
The Policy-Making Process Setting the Agenda
Political Settlements and the Governance of Growth-Enhancing Institutions
Promoting Electoral Integrity Through Aid: Analysis and Advice for Donors
Wealth and Policymaking in the U.S. House of Representatives
Interest Groups, Lobbying and Polarization in the United States
Norm Transference: Understanding Patron- Client Norm Diffusion in the Emergence of International Sexual Orientation and Gender Identity Human Rights
Does Patronage Still Drive Politics for the Rural Poor in the Developing World? a Comparative Perspective from the Livestock Sector
Does Federalism Matter in Africa?
Advanced Placement American Government and Politics
Africana: a Journal of Ideas on Africa and the African Diaspora
The Policy-Making Process
The Pitfalls of Client Politics by Dr W B Vosloo*, Wollongong, August 2015
CHAPTER 20 Foreign Policy and Military Policy
Top View
Actors-Centered Approaches
Informal Institutions and Comparative Politics: a Research Agenda
AP Government Review Packet
Why Liberal States Accept Unwanted Immigration Author(S): Christian Joppke Source: World Politics, Vol
Chapter 3 Assessing the Lay of the Land: the Interest Group Matrix
Patron-Client Politics and Political Change in Southeast Asia Author(S): James C
1 Clientelism and Conceptual Stretching
Machine Politics: the Concept and Its Implications for Post-Soviet Studies
Reseña De" the Transnational Politics of US Immigration Policy" De Marc
Patron-Client Politics and Governance System in Nepal
Clientelism and Voting Behavior: Evidence from a Field Experiment
The Military Regime: a Case Clientelism in Thailand from Study
The Role of the African Media in Patron-Client Relations: a Preliminary Look
1 Clientelism and Economic Policy