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ID164687
Title ProperIronic political reforms
Other Title Informationelected senators, party-list MPs, and family rule in Thailand
LanguageENG
AuthorNishizaki, Yoshinori
Summary / Abstract (Note)An elected Senate and the party-list system are two institutional innovations of the 1997 Thai Constitution designed to support political reforms. This paper sheds light on one unintended effect of these reforms: they have allowed scores of political families to maintain or even tighten their grip on Parliament. Combining aggregate data and case studies, this paper shows that a sizable number of elected senators and party-list parliamentary members are related, by birth or marriage, to other parliament members elected in the post-1932 period. The well-intended reforms have concentrated parliamentary power in the hands of these families, many of which represent the excesses of Thailand’s full-blown electoral democracy. The survival and resilience of these families diminish reform opportunities by further entrenching corruption, clientelism, violence, and electoral fraud, as well as by deepening dynastic rule that militates against political pluralism and inclusiveness.
`In' analytical NoteCritical Asian Studies Vol. 51, No.2; Jun 2019: p. 210-231
Journal SourceCritical Asian Studies 2019-05 51, 2
Key WordsElectoral Reforms ;  Senate ;  Thailan ;  Political Families ;  Party List