An edition of Coalitions of the Well-Being (2015)

Coalitions of the Well-Being

How Electoral Rules and Ethnic Politics Shape Health Policy in Developing Countries

Coalitions of the Well-Being
Joel Sawat Selway, Joel Sawat ...
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Last edited by MARC Bot
May 5, 2025 | History
An edition of Coalitions of the Well-Being (2015)

Coalitions of the Well-Being

How Electoral Rules and Ethnic Politics Shape Health Policy in Developing Countries

"Why do some developing countries have more efficient health systems and better health outcomes? Contrary to existing theory that posits the superiority of proportional representation (PR) rules on public-goods provision, this book argues that electoral rules function differently given the underlying ethnic structure. In countries with low ethnic salience, PR has the same positive effect as in past theories. In countries with high ethnic salience, the geographic distribution of ethnic groups further matters: where they are intermixed, PR rules are worse for health outcomes; where they are isolated, neither rule is superior. The theory is supported through a combination of careful analysis of electoral reform in individual country cases with numerous well-designed cross-country comparisons. The case studies include Thailand, Mauritius, Malaysia, Botswana, Burma and Indonesia. The theory has broad implications for electoral rule design and suggests a middle ground in the debate between the Consociational and Centripetal schools of thought"--

Publish Date
Language
English
Pages
308

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Book Details


Classifications

Library of Congress
RA395.D44 S45 2015

Edition Identifiers

Open Library
OL28562942M
ISBN 13
9781107103047
LCCN
2015004869
OCLC/WorldCat
905801778

Work Identifiers

Work ID
OL21101056W

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