Individual Motives for Voter Turnout in the Arab World: What Impact Does the Evaluation of the Political System's Democratic

Volume 12|Issue 70| Sep 2024 |Articles

Abstract

Several scholars studying the so-called authoritarian elections argue that the primary motivation for citizens to vote in the Arab world is the pursuit of individual (mostly material) interests driven by clientelism that may take the form of explicit vote-buying or granting services and privileges to electors. However, research overlooked the potential impact of citizens' evaluation of the regime's democratic level on electoral participation. The goal of this study is to fill this gap. The analysis of the eighth round of the Arab Opinion Index (2022) across nine Arab countries—Jordan, Tunisia, Algeria, Iraq, Kuwait, Lebanon, Egypt, Morocco, and Mauritania— reveals that individuals who perceive their country as more democratic are more likely to vote, regardless of objective indicators suggesting the undemocratic nature of the political system.

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Assistant Professor, Political Science and International Relations, Doha Institute for Graduate Studies.

​Moroccan Researcher, and Master's student in Politics and International Relations, Doha Institute for Graduate Studies.

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