Published online by Cambridge University Press: 23 February 2023
The scarce state’s actions – especially the invention of chieftaincy – have had lasting implications for distributive politics. This chapter connects clientelism to the scarce state’s actions, showing that one particularly large effect of the state on political competition has been through the creation of the community-level brokers that allow parties to engage in clientelism at scale. Clientelism in this hinterland is facilitated most effectively by the chiefs that the state itself created.
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