The Adverse Effects of Sunshine: A Field Experiment on Legislative Transparency in an Authoritarian Assembly
Abstract
An influential literature has demonstrated that legislative transparency can improve
the performance of parliamentarians in democracies. In a democracy, the incentive
for improved performance is created by voters' responses to newly available information.
Building on this work, donor projects have begun to export transparency interventions
to authoritarian regimes under the assumption that nongovernmental organizations and
the media can substitute for the incentives created by voters. Such interventions,
however, are at odds with an emerging literature that argues that authoritarian parliaments
primarily serve the role of co-optation and limited power sharing, where complaints
can be raised in a manner that does not threaten regime stability. We argue that under
these conditions, transparency may have perverse effects, and we test this theory
with a randomized experiment on delegate behavior in query sessions in Vietnam, a
single-party authoritarian regime. We find no evidence of a direct effect of the transparency
treatment on delegate performance; however, further analysis reveals that delegates
subjected to high treatment intensity demonstrate robust evidence of curtailed participation
and damaged reelection prospects. These results make us cautious about the export
of transparency without electoral sanctioning. © 2012 American Political Science Association.
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https://hdl.handle.net/10161/17753Published Version (Please cite this version)
10.1017/S0003055412000408Publication Info
Malesky, EJ; Schuler, P; & Tran, A (2012). The Adverse Effects of Sunshine: A Field Experiment on Legislative Transparency in
an Authoritarian Assembly. American Political Science Review, 106(04). pp. 762-786. 10.1017/S0003055412000408. Retrieved from https://hdl.handle.net/10161/17753.This is constructed from limited available data and may be imprecise. To cite this
article, please review & use the official citation provided by the journal.
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Show full item recordScholars@Duke
Edmund Malesky
Professor of Political Science
Malesky is a specialist on Southeast Asia, particularly Vietnam. Currently, Malesky's
research agenda is very much at the intersection of Comparative and International
Political Economy, falling into three major categories: 1) Authoritarian political
institutions and their consequences; 2) The political influence of foreign direct
investment and multinational corporations; and 3) Political institutions, private
business development, and formalization.

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