DiscoverPolitical Science DigestEpisode 10. Rooting Out or Rooting For Corruption? Why Some Corrupt Politicians Keep Winning
Episode 10. Rooting Out or Rooting For Corruption? Why Some Corrupt Politicians Keep Winning

Episode 10. Rooting Out or Rooting For Corruption? Why Some Corrupt Politicians Keep Winning

Update: 2025-03-29
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Ever wondered why voters sometimes overlook corruption at the ballot box? In this episode, we explore the fascinating paper by Pablo Fernández-Vázquez, Pablo Barberá, and Gonzalo Rivero, "Rooting Out Corruption or Rooting for Corruption?" We dive deep into the varied electoral consequences of corruption scandals, uncovering why some corrupt officials remain popular.


We simplify complex findings into engaging discussions, revealing how voters might ignore corruption when it provides short-term economic benefits, while only punishing corruption when they don't benefit from it.


📖 Citation: Fernández-Vázquez, Pablo, Barberá, Pablo, and Rivero, Gonzalo. 2015. "Rooting Out Corruption or Rooting for Corruption? The Heterogeneous Electoral Consequences of Scandals." Political Science Research and Methods 4(2): 379–397. [doi:10.1017/psrm.2015.8]


Have questions or thoughts? We're eager to hear from you at 📩 contact@politicalsciencedigest.com.


Join us as we dissect voter behavior on corruption, one digestible episode at a time!


 

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Episode 10. Rooting Out or Rooting For Corruption? Why Some Corrupt Politicians Keep Winning

Episode 10. Rooting Out or Rooting For Corruption? Why Some Corrupt Politicians Keep Winning

Political Science Digest