@article{bdf3e84ffb4d454baa6cf4275a4df5ea,
title = "The Real Winner's Curse",
abstract = "Traditional theories of democracy suggest that political representation of excluded groups can reduce their incentives to engage in conflict and lead to lower violence. However, this argument ignores the response of established elites when (1) their interests are threatened by the policy stance of new political actors and (2) elites have a comparative advantage in the exercise of violence. Using a regression discontinuity approach, we show that the narrow election of previously excluded left-wing parties to local executive office in Colombia results in a one standard deviation increase in violent events by right-wing paramilitaries. We interpret this surge in violence as a reaction of traditional elites to offset the increase in outsiders' access to formal political power. Consistent with this interpretation, we find that violence by left-wing guerrillas and other actors is unaffected and that violence is not influenced by the victory of right-wing or other new parties in close elections.",
author = "Leopoldo Fergusson and Pablo Querubin and Ruiz, {Nelson A.} and Vargas, {Juan F.}",
note = "Funding Information: For their helpful comments, we thank Juan Carlos Angulo, Tim Besley, Catherine Boone, Laura Bronner, Adriana Camacho, Ernesto Dal-B{\'o}, Guadalupe Dorna, Juan Dubra, Marcela Eslava, Claudio Ferraz, Jean-Paul Faguet, Xavier Freixas, Sebasti{\'a}n Galiani, Jenny Guardado, Frances Hagopian, Dominik Hangartner, Daniel Hidalgo, Marc Hofstetter, Gwyneth McClendon, Oskar Nupia, Rafael Santos, Jos{\'e} Tessada, Santiago Tob{\'o}n, Hern{\'a}n Vallejo, Diana Weinhold, and participants at the Brown “Violence: Processes, Responses, & Alternatives” Workshop, CEDE-Universidad de los Andes Weekly Seminar, Universidad del Rosario, Universidad Cat{\'o}lica de Chile, Forum Ridge-Lacea Political Economy, Harvard-DRCLAS Tuesday Seminar Series, Harvard Political Economy Graduate Workshop, LSE's Political Science Work in Progress Seminar, LSE Political Economy and Public Policy Workshop, LSE's Research Seminar in International Development, MIT's Latin American Working Group, MPSA Annual Meetings 2016, NEWEPS 2016, the NYU Graduate Political Economy Seminar, and the 6th Annual Conference of the Al Capone network. Juan Carlos Angulo, Juliana Arag{\'o}n, Carmen Delgado, Francisco Eslava, Diego Mart{\'i}n, Juan Camilo Mej{\'i}a, and David Vargas provided superb research assistance. Fergusson gratefully acknowledges Harvard's David Rockefeller Center for Latin American Studies; this research was partly conducted during his stay as a Santo Domingo Visiting Scholar. Ruiz gratefully acknowledges UNU-WIDER for its support. Publisher Copyright: {\textcopyright} 2020, Midwest Political Science Association",
year = "2021",
month = jan,
doi = "10.1111/ajps.12508",
language = "English (US)",
volume = "65",
pages = "52--68",
journal = "American Journal of Political Science",
issn = "0092-5853",
publisher = "Wiley-Blackwell Publishing Ltd",
number = "1",
}