When the Vote is Not the Only Factor: (Re)thinking Electoral Corruption in Nineteenth-Century Europe from the Electors’ Perspective

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Abstract

Practices labelled as corrupt in nineteenth-century European elections are generally conceived either as a form of domination where the candidates and their agents use exclusive resources for personal gain or a means of transaction between candidates and voters, on the assumption that candidates deploy corrupt practices in order to perusade voters. Consequently, electoral corruption in the nineteenth century is considered a tool that limits the participation of enfranchised citizens, whose conception of corruption is largely uncultivated. This study challenges this notion and demonstrates how corrupt practices by electors in societies where freedom was not guaranteed, did not restrain but instead extended the possibilities of political participation. The novelty of this study is based on integrating research focused on politicization beyond the elite and the new history of corruption, using Great Britain, France, and Spain as case studies. This integrated process found that corruption was used by electors to overturn unfavourable results, thus providing a platform for participation beyond voting.
Translated title of the contributionCuando el voto no es el único factor: Repensar la corrupción electoral en la Europa del siglo XIX desde la perspectiva de los electores
Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)620-640
Number of pages21
JournalEuropean History Quarterly
Volume53
Issue number4
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 5 Oct 2023

Keywords

  • France
  • Great Britain
  • Spain
  • electoral corruption
  • electors
  • nineteenth century

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