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Political Institutions and Coups in Dictatorships

Authors
Kim, Nam KyuSudduth, Jun Koga
Issue Date
8월-2021
Publisher
SAGE PUBLICATIONS INC
Keywords
non-democratic regimes; institutionalized authoritarianism; coup d& #8217; etat; leader survival; regime transition
Citation
COMPARATIVE POLITICAL STUDIES, v.54, no.9, pp.1597 - 1628
Indexed
SSCI
SCOPUS
Journal Title
COMPARATIVE POLITICAL STUDIES
Volume
54
Number
9
Start Page
1597
End Page
1628
URI
https://scholar.korea.ac.kr/handle/2021.sw.korea/127672
DOI
10.1177/0010414021997161
ISSN
0010-4140
Abstract
Does the creation of nominally democratic institutions help dictators stay in power by diminishing the risk of coups? We posit that the effectiveness of political institutions in deterring coups crucially depends on the types of plotters and their political goals. By providing a means to address the ruling coalition's primary concerns about a dictator's opportunism or incompetence, institutions reduce the necessity of reshuffling coups, in which the ruling coalition replaces an incumbent leader but keeps the regime intact. However, such institutions do not diminish the risk of regime-changing coups, because the plotters' goals of overthrowing the entire regime and changing the group of ruling coalition are not achievable via activities within the institutions. Our empirical analysis provides strong empirical support for our expectations. Our findings highlight that the role of "democratic" institutions in deterring coups is rather limited as it only applies to less than 38% of coup attempts.
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