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Featured researches published by Abby Córdova.


PS Political Science & Politics | 2009

Economic Crisis and Democracy in Latin America

Abby Córdova; Mitchell A. Seligson

While the world is focused on the economic impact of the financial and credit meltdown, what might be its impact on politics? In well-established democracies, probably not more than elections lost by incumbent parties seen as having mismanaged the economy. But what of consolidating democracies that predominate in the developing world, where some forecasts expect the crisis to hit the poor especially hard? This article uses AmericasBarometer survey data from Latin America and the Caribbean drawn on the eve of the crisis to project how it might affect democracy in the region.


Comparative Political Studies | 2015

Shaping Politics at Home Cross-Border Social Ties and Local-Level Political Engagement

Abby Córdova; Jonathan Hiskey

The dramatic rise of democratic regimes around the world has coincided with an equally significant increase in migration, characterized by an unprecedented movement of people from emerging to established democracies. Through analysis of survey data from six Latin American countries, we offer an empirical evaluation of theoretical mechanisms through which migration can shape the political behaviors of non-migrants in sending nations. We find that individuals who have strong cross-border ties that connect them with relatives living in the United States are more likely to participate in local politics, sympathize with a political party, and persuade others to vote for a party. Those effects are influenced by the positive impact of cross-border ties on civic community involvement, political interest, and political efficacy. Moreover, the evidence suggests that frequent usage of the Internet among non-migrants with strong cross-border ties results in increased political knowledge, which contributes to their greater political interest and efficacy.


The Journal of Politics | 2016

Making Space for Women: Explaining Citizen Support for Legislative Gender Quotas in Latin America

Tiffany D. Barnes; Abby Córdova

Gender quotas have been adopted in over a hundred countries in an effort to address gender disparities in national legislatures. Yet the determinants of citizen support for gender quota policies remain largely understudied. We develop a theory that emphasizes the impact of institutional performance and political values to explain citizen support for gender quotas and how these two factors differentially influence men’s and women’s quota support. Based on data for 24 Latin American countries, we find that citizens in countries with relatively good governance quality who express a strong preference for government involvement to improve citizens’ well-being show the highest levels of quota support. Further, whereas good governance increases quota support at a higher rate among men than women, preferences for government involvement exert a stronger influence on women’s support for quotas. Consequently, good governance quality reduces the gender gap in quota support by substantially increasing men’s support for quotas.


Comparative Political Studies | 2017

Addressing the Gender Gap: The Effect of Compulsory Voting on Women’s Electoral Engagement

Abby Córdova; Gabriela Rangel

In light of gender disparities in political involvement, extant research has examined mechanisms for incorporating ordinary women into politics. We complement this literature by exploring the effect of an overlooked institution theorized to promote political equality by maximizing voter turnout: compulsory voting. We theorize that in enforced compulsory voting systems, women are more likely to receive and seek information about electoral choices than their counterparts in voluntary voting systems. Consequently, compulsory voting helps narrow the gender gap beyond voting by creating opportunities and motivations for women to engage with the electoral process and its main actors. Our multilevel analysis based on cross-national survey data lends strong support to our hypotheses. Countries with enforced mandatory voting laws display a much smaller gender gap not only in voting, but also in several other forms of electoral engagement, including political party information, campaign attentiveness, party attachment, and campaign participation.


World Politics | 2016

When Is "Delivering the Goods" Not Good Enough?: How Economic Disparities in Latin American Neighborhoods Shape Citizen Trust in Local Government

Abby Córdova; Matthew L. Layton

This article develops and tests a theory to explain why perceptions of good government performance are a necessary but insufficient condition for the poor to trust their local government. The authors theorize that independent of partisan sympathies, the poor evaluate local government on the basis of government performance and the economic disparities that they observe in their neighborhood of residence. Accordingly, even if the poor hold positive perceptions of government performance, they are less likely to trust their local government when they live in a context of high economic inequality. To test their theory, the authors rely on census, public opinion, and systematic observation data collected within resident-identified neighborhood borders in each of seventy-one neighborhoods sampled from six municipalities in El Salvador. The findings are consistent with the hypotheses and indicate that economic inequality at the neighborhood level may produce a reservoir of distrust in local government among the poor. The results further highlight the political relevance of neighborhoods for the formation of citizen attitudes toward local government in the Latin American context.


Latin American Politics and Society | 2010

Economic Shocks and Democratic Vulnerabilities in Latin America and the Caribbean

Abby Córdova; Mitchell A. Seligson


Latin American Politics and Society | 2015

Old and New Forms of Civic Engagement

Abby Córdova


International Journal of Sociology | 2011

The Role of Social Capital in Citizen Support for Government Action to Reduce Economic Inequality

Abby Córdova


Archive | 2008

Cultura política de la democracia en Honduras, 2008 El impacto de la gobernabilidad

Kenneth M. Coleman; José René Argueta; Mitchell A. Seligson; Dominique Zéphyr; Abby Córdova


Latin American Research Review | 2018

Leaving the Devil You Know: Crime Victimization, US Deterrence Policy, and the Emigration Decision in Central America

Jonathan Hiskey; Abby Córdova; Mary Fran T. Malone; Diana Orces

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