Winning Hearts and Votes: Social Services and the Islamist Political Advantage

Winning Hearts and Votes: Social Services and the Islamist Political Advantage

by Steven Brooke
Winning Hearts and Votes: Social Services and the Islamist Political Advantage

Winning Hearts and Votes: Social Services and the Islamist Political Advantage

by Steven Brooke

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Overview

In non-democratic regimes around the world, non-state organizations provide millions of citizens with medical care, schooling, childrearing, and other critical social services. Why would any authoritarian countenance this type of activism? Under what conditions does the private provision of social services generate political mobilization? And in those cases, what linkage does the provision of social services forge between the provider and recipient?

In Winning Hearts and Votes, Steven Brooke argues that authoritarians often seek to manage moments of economic crisis by offloading social welfare responsibilities to non-state providers. But providers who serve poorer citizens, motivated by either charity of clientelism, will be constrained in their ability to mobilize voters because the poor depend on the state for many different goods. Organizations that serve paying customers, in contrast, may produce high quality, consistent, and effective services. This type of provision generates powerful, reputation-based linkages with a middle-class constituency more likely to support the provider on election day.

Brooke backs up his novel argument with an in-depth examination of the Egyptian Muslim Brotherhood, the archetypal organization that combines social service provision with electoral success. With a fascinating array of historical, qualitative, spatial, and experimental data he traces the Brotherhood's provision of medical services from its origins in the 1970s, through its maturation under the authoritarian regime of Hosni Mubarak, to its apogee during the country's brief democratic interlude, 2011–2013. In addition to generating new insights into authoritarian regimes, party-voter linkages and clientelism, and the relationship between political parties and social movements, Winning Hearts and Votes details the history, operations, and political effects of the Muslim Brotherhood's much discussed but little understood social service network.


Product Details

ISBN-13: 9781501730641
Publisher: Cornell University Press
Publication date: 01/15/2019
Sold by: Barnes & Noble
Format: eBook
Pages: 234
File size: 3 MB
Age Range: 18 Years

About the Author

Steven Brooke is Assistant Professor in the Department of Political Science at the University of Louisville and Associate Fellow (Non-Resident) at the Middle East Initiative, Harvard Kennedy School.

Table of Contents

Acknowledgments
Note on Transliteration
1. Social Services and Political Mobilization in Nondemocratic Regimes
2. Middle-Class Provision, Reputation, and Electoral Success
3. Rebuilding the Brotherhood Brand
4. Inside the Islamist Advantage
5. The Political Geography of Islamist Social Service Provision
6. Electing to Serve
7. Mohammed Morsi's Machine
8. The Politics of Social Service Provision
Appendix
Notes
Works Cited
Index

What People are Saying About This

Joshua Stacher

Winning Hearts and Votes is a tour de force. Steven T. Brooke’s historical research is sublime, and he makes important and concrete interventions on a number of topics to students and researchers within political science and the field of Egypt studies. This book will be the definitive account on this topic for years to come.

Melani Cammett

In his study of the Egyptian Islamic Medical Association, Steven Brooke asks why authoritarian regimes allow non-state actors to provide services and how service delivery builds support for the Islamist opposition. This highly engaging book breaks new ground on a critically important topic.

Tarek Masoud

In this dazzling study of healthcare provision by a religiously conservative party in Egypt, Steven Brooke convinces us that service provision does not buy votes so much as it buys esteem. This is a model of empirical sophistication and precision and brings the Egyptian case into dialogue with broader literature on political parties and clientelism. This is comparative politics of the first rank.

Daniel Corstange

Steven Brooke’s book will sit comfortably on the shelf next to several recent classics in the political science literature by Egyptian specialists, and will be discussed alongside those by many.

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