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PATRON – CLIENT RELATIONS (2) answer(s).
 
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ID:   138100


Changes in the socioeconomic structure and the attitude of citizens toward democracy in the Nepali civil war / Kubota, Yuichi; Sasaoka, Shinya   Article
Kubota, Yuichi Article
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Summary/Abstract Why do citizens support democracy under an authoritarian regime that has been waging a protracted civil war? This paper explores the attitude toward democracy expressed by urbanites who were protected by the incumbent, by employing the AsiaBarometer survey data collected during the Nepali civil war. Our empirical finding is that citizens’ favorable attitude toward democracy is fostered by economic downturn and deterioration in security. In Nepal, civil war weakened relations between the capital’s residents and rural peasants as the rebels extended their influence in the countryside and shrank the urban economic sectors. Rebel infiltration into Kathmandu furthermore posed a great threat to the residents.
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2
ID:   137782


Chinese model for patron–client relations? the Sino-Cambodian partnership / Ciorciari, John D   Article
Ciorciari, John D Article
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Summary/Abstract Despite extensive economic ties and political engagement throughout Asia and sizable investment in some of the region's most vulnerable regimes, China has yet to develop a stable of devoted client states. This article argues that both strategic and normative factors militate against China's cultivation of strong patron–client pacts. The article then uses the case of Cambodia to illustrate these arguments, analyzing how that partnership has developed and its important limitations.
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