Repression and Long-term Political Leadership

Received: 12 Apr 2020, Revised: 15 Apr 2020, Accepted: 18 July 2020, Available online: 09 Sep 2020, Version of Record: 09 Sep 2020

Sanna Nurmikko-Metsola

Abstract


This paper develops a model where an incumbent may try to bribe the security forces to repress the political opposition in order to improve his/her chances of winning the elections. Such situations can be demonstrated by the cases of Cambodia, Uganda and Zimbabwe where the political leadership has used repression in and around the election times. In a collusive equilibrium, the security forces produce violence and the leader responds by giving a bribe to the former, this pair of actions taking place in each period. A collusive equilibrium exists when the bribe that a leader is prepared to pay is at least as large as the bribe that the security forces are willing to accept. We find that a harsher expected punishment (e.g. a longer prison sentence) will improve an incumbent’s incentives to collude. In contrast, security forces expecting a harsher punishment will be less likely to repress. Furthermore, we discuss the circumstances under which windfall revenue (e.g. foreign aid, resource rents) may contribute to violence and when it may prevent it.
Keywords:



Description



   

Indexed in scopus

https://www.scopus.com/results/authorNamesList.uri?sort=count-f&src=al&sid=6d1b9c5a52522656aaaf22450ebb6add&sot=al&sdt=al&sl=51&s=AUTHLASTNAME%28Nurmikko-Metsola%29+AND+AUTHFIRST%28Sanna%29&st1=Nurmikko-Metsola&st2=Sanna&orcidId=&selectionPageSearch=anl&reselectAuthor=false&activeFlag=true&showDocument=false&resultsPerPage=20&offset=1&jtp=false¤tPage=1&previousSelectionCount=0&tooManySelections=false&previousResultCount=0&authSubject=LFSC&authSubject=HLSC&authSubject=PHSC&authSubject=SOSC&
      

Article metrics

10.31763/DSJ.v5i1.1674 Abstract views : | PDF views :

   

Cite

   

Full Text

Download

Conflict of interest


“Authors state no conflict of interest”


Funding Information


This research received no external funding or grants


Peer review:


Peer review under responsibility of Defence Science Journal


Ethics approval:


Not applicable.


Consent for publication:


Not applicable.


Acknowledgements:


None.