{"dcterms:modified":"2025-04-02","dcterms:creator":"Harvard Dataverse","@type":"ore:ResourceMap","schema:additionalType":"Dataverse OREMap Format v1.0.1","dvcore:generatedBy":{"@type":"schema:SoftwareApplication","schema:name":"Dataverse","schema:version":"6.6 build 1829-192cdc4","schema:url":"https://github.com/iqss/dataverse"},"@id":"https://dataverse.harvard.edu/api/datasets/export?exporter=OAI_ORE&persistentId=https://doi.org/10.7910/DVN/R8TUOQ","ore:describes":{"author":[{"citation:authorName":"Arriola, Leonardo","citation:authorAffiliation":"University of California, Berkeley"},{"citation:authorName":"DeVaro, Jed","citation:authorAffiliation":"California State University, East Bay"},{"citation:authorName":"Meng, Anne","citation:authorAffiliation":"University of Virginia"}],"publication":{"publicationCitation":"Arriola, Leonardo, Jed DeVaro, and Anne Meng. 2021. \"Democratic Subversion: Elite Cooptation and Opposition Fragmentation.\" American Political Science Review, 1-15. ​","publicationIDType":"doi","publicationIDNumber":"10.1017/S0003055421000629","publicationURL":"https://doi.org/10.1017/S0003055421000629"},"citation:dsDescription":{"citation:dsDescriptionValue":"Incumbents in electoral regimes often retain power despite having to regularly\ncompete in multiparty elections. We examine a specific channel through which\nincumbents can seek to prevent the emergence of a strong opposition that might\nthreaten them in future elections. We present a formal model demonstrating that\nincumbents can strategically induce opposition fragmentation by appointing some\nopposition members to ministerial cabinet positions. Opposition politicians who have\nthe opportunity to secure a cabinet position in an incumbent’s government tend to\ncompete for office independently rather than coalescing into broad-based parties or\nelectoral alliances. The model shows that weaker incumbents are more likely to rely\non this cooptation strategy. Using original data on presidential elections across\nAfrican countries in 1990-2016, we show that past cooptation of opposition\npoliticians is associated with a more fragmented opposition field in subsequent\nelections."},"citation:datasetContact":{"citation:datasetContactName":"Meng, Anne","citation:datasetContactAffiliation":"University of Virginia","citation:datasetContactEmail":"am3wu@virginia.edu"},"title":"Replication Data for: Democratic Subversion: Elite Cooptation and Opposition Fragmentation.","citation:depositor":"Meng, Anne","subject":"Social Sciences","dateOfDeposit":"2021-06-08","journal:journalVolumeIssue":{"journal:journalPubDate":"2021-07"},"journal:journalArticleType":"research article","alternativeURL":"https://doi.org/10.7910/DVN/R8TUOQ","@id":"https://doi.org/10.7910/DVN/R8TUOQ","@type":["ore:Aggregation","schema:Dataset"],"schema:version":"1.0","schema:name":"Replication Data for: Democratic Subversion: Elite Cooptation and Opposition Fragmentation.","schema:dateModified":"Thu Jul 08 10:26:52 UTC 2021","schema:datePublished":"2021-07-08","schema:creativeWorkStatus":"RELEASED","schema:license":"http://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0","dvcore:fileTermsOfAccess":{"dvcore:fileRequestAccess":false},"schema:includedInDataCatalog":"Harvard Dataverse","schema:isPartOf":{"schema:name":"American Political Science Review Dataverse","@id":"https://dataverse.harvard.edu/dataverse/the_review","schema:description":"The <i>American Political Science Review</i> is political science's premier scholarly research journal, providing peer-reviewed articles and review essays from subfields throughout the discipline. Areas covered include political theory, American politics, public policy, public administration, comparative politics, and international relations. APSR has published continuously since 1906.\n<br><br>\nFor questions, please reach out to apsr@apsanet.org","schema:isPartOf":{"schema:name":"Harvard Dataverse","@id":"https://dataverse.harvard.edu/dataverse/harvard","schema:description":"<span><span><span><h3>Share, archive, and get credit for your data. Find and cite data across all research fields.</h3></span></span></span>"}},"ore:aggregates":[{"schema:name":"demo_subv_adm_code.do","dvcore:restricted":false,"schema:version":1,"dvcore:datasetVersionId":247829,"@id":"https://dataverse.harvard.edu/file.xhtml?fileId=4788679","schema:sameAs":"https://dataverse.harvard.edu/api/access/datafile/4788679","@type":"ore:AggregatedResource","schema:fileFormat":"application/x-stata-syntax","dvcore:filesize":23856,"dvcore:storageIdentifier":"s3://dvn-cloud:179ed93769d-bf67efea7377","dvcore:rootDataFileId":-1,"dvcore:checksum":{"@type":"MD5","@value":"ce6d5a52e1882a2cc7510a4f7448c85a"}},{"schema:name":"demo_subv_adm_data.dta","dvcore:restricted":false,"schema:version":3,"dvcore:datasetVersionId":247829,"@id":"https://dataverse.harvard.edu/file.xhtml?fileId=4788678","schema:sameAs":"https://dataverse.harvard.edu/api/access/datafile/4788678?format=original","@type":"ore:AggregatedResource","schema:fileFormat":"application/x-stata-14","dvcore:filesize":167545,"dvcore:storageIdentifier":"s3://dvn-cloud:179ed93868b-f6a84eba8f38","dvcore:currentIngestedName":"demo_subv_adm_data.tab","dvcore:UNF":"UNF:6:Nk/xhGPVreurGI55KFcKrQ==","dvcore:rootDataFileId":-1,"dvcore:checksum":{"@type":"MD5","@value":"849beae41767b7d8d121c7488585921d"}},{"schema:name":"Online Appendices.pdf","dvcore:restricted":false,"schema:version":1,"dvcore:datasetVersionId":247829,"@id":"https://dataverse.harvard.edu/file.xhtml?fileId=4790210","schema:sameAs":"https://dataverse.harvard.edu/api/access/datafile/4790210","@type":"ore:AggregatedResource","schema:fileFormat":"application/pdf","dvcore:filesize":482105,"dvcore:storageIdentifier":"s3://dvn-cloud:179f6c89510-647b7d90395a","dvcore:rootDataFileId":-1,"dvcore:checksum":{"@type":"MD5","@value":"53b4a77682c2d7f1f4a5bdabe9b609f9"}}],"schema:hasPart":["https://dataverse.harvard.edu/file.xhtml?fileId=4788679","https://dataverse.harvard.edu/file.xhtml?fileId=4788678","https://dataverse.harvard.edu/file.xhtml?fileId=4790210"]},"@context":{"alternativeURL":"https://schema.org/distribution","author":"http://purl.org/dc/terms/creator","citation":"https://dataverse.org/schema/citation/","dateOfDeposit":"http://purl.org/dc/terms/dateSubmitted","dcterms":"http://purl.org/dc/terms/","dvcore":"https://dataverse.org/schema/core#","journal":"https://dataverse.harvard.edu/schema/journal#","ore":"http://www.openarchives.org/ore/terms/","publication":"http://purl.org/dc/terms/isReferencedBy","publicationCitation":"http://purl.org/dc/terms/bibliographicCitation","publicationIDNumber":"http://purl.org/spar/datacite/ResourceIdentifier","publicationIDType":"http://purl.org/spar/datacite/ResourceIdentifierScheme","publicationURL":"https://schema.org/distribution","schema":"http://schema.org/","subject":"http://purl.org/dc/terms/subject","title":"http://purl.org/dc/terms/title"}}