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Featured researches published by Rosario Espinal.


Comparative Political Studies | 2006

Performance Still Matters: Explaining Trust in Government in the Dominican Republic

Rosario Espinal; Jonathan Hartlyn; Jana Morgan Kelly

What explains low levels of trust in government institutions in democratizing Latin American countries? The authors examine this question in the Dominican Republic, employing data from three surveys conducted over 1994 to 2001. Their analysis finds that trust in government institutions is shaped primarily by perceptions of economic and political performance by government. There is little evidence of a relationship between civic engagement and institutional trust, and no relationship between democratic values and institutional trust. They find a curvilinear effect between socioeconomic status and institutional trust, with middle-sector groups significantly less trusting of government institutions than either the poor or the wealthy. Age has a nonlinear effect as older generations, who experienced authoritarianism as children, are considerably more trusting of democratic institutions, contradicting predictions by culturalist early-life socialization arguments. The authors conclude that low trust per se is not the major challenge for governance.


Gender & Society | 2000

MARKET SUCCESS OR FEMALE AUTONOMY? Income, Ideology, and Empowerment among Microentrepreneurs in the Dominican Republic

Sherri Grasmuck; Rosario Espinal

This article examines the impact of gender on the relative economic success of microentrepreneurs, their contributions to family income, and the impact of gender ideology and income on household decision making. The concept of economic success is problematized by examining how these businesses, even those of limited assets and income generation, offer women increased autonomy in household budgetary matters and decision making. The analysis draws on data from a representative survey of 201 male and female microentrepreneurs in the Dominican Republic. The findings show that household decision making is influenced by variations in economic power but that gender ideologies structure the direction and extent of this influence, reflected in distinct “gender thresholds,” or the point at which income contributions start to matter.


Journal of Latin American Studies | 1990

Unlikely Transitions to Uncertain Regimes? Democracy without Compromise in the Dominican Republic and Ecuador *

Catherine M. Conaghan; Rosario Espinal

Charting the historical paths to democracy has been a long-standing concern of political sociology. 1 With the demise of authoritarian rule in Latin America over the last decade, a classic question of the genre has resurfaced: are there certain developmental sequences that are more likely to produce successful transitions to democracy? If there is any conclusion to be drawn from recent experiences, the answer is no. Highly heterogeneous circumstances have produced Latin Americas most recent wave of democratisation. From the Caribbean to the Southern Cone, countries at different levels of economic development, with distinctive authoritarian legacies and divergent class structures, all underwent transitions to elected civilian governments in the last decade.


International Political Science Review | 2016

Trust in government institutions: The effects of performance and participation in the Dominican Republic and Haiti

Alissandra T Stoyan; Sara Niedzwiecki; Jana Morgan; Jonathan Hartlyn; Rosario Espinal

This article analyzes theories of institutional trust in Haiti and the Dominican Republic, two developing countries that have shared some historical legacies but currently manifest divergent economic and political trajectories. The evidence confirms that conventional theories emphasizing participation and government performance help us understand institutional trust in both countries. In addition, the analysis emphasizes the analytical leverage gained by exploring the extent to which different facets of engagement have divergent effects on institutional trust. The findings build upon previous research to underscore the importance of considering how context shapes the precise ways in which performance and engagement influence institutional trust, particularly when analyzing the developing world.


Opinião Pública | 2006

Diferenças de gênero na República Dominicana, 1994-2004: dois passos à frente, um passo para trás?

Jana Morgan Kelly; Rosario Espinal; Jonathan Hartlyn

The slowly changing nature of the gender gap responds both to significant social changes, such as urbanization, education, the entry of women into the labor force, and democratization, as well as to concerted efforts by social movements and political leaders to broaden women’s right. These factors have clearly played an important role in the Dominican Republic over this past decade, impacting the country’s gender gap. We assess the nature and evolution of the Dominican Republic’s gender gap over the 1994-2004 period employing data taken from four nationwide public opinion surveys in the Dominican Republic – the Demos surveys – conducted in 1994, 1997, 2001, and 2004. The analysis of these surveys indicates that elements of what has been termed a traditional gender gap remain in place in the country with regard to civic engagement, political interest, and attitudes toward democracy. At the same time, this gap disappeared with regard to voter participation in elections and a modern gender gap emerged for the first time with regard to attitudes about the role of women in politics. Age and education have consistent and substantial differential effects across the attitudinal profiles of Dominican men and women over this time period.


Bulletin of Latin American Research | 1990

The Defeat of the Dominican Revolutionary Party in the 1986 Elections: Causes and Implications

Rosario Espinal

In the late 1970s and early 1980s, Latin America witnessed a democratic turnover. Democratically elected civilian governments were installed in several countries including the Dominican Republic, Ecuador, Peru, Uruguay, Argentina, Bolivia, and Brazil.1 In each case the transition took a different form depending on the nature of the previous authoritarian regime and the correlation of forces at the time of transition, yet regardless of the specificities of each transition, the democratic opening fuelled expectations of social reforms.


Journal of Comparative Family Studies | 1997

Gender, Households and Informal Entrepreneurship in the Dominican Republic

Rosario Espinal; Sherri Grasmuck


Latin American Politics and Society | 2011

Dominican Party System Continuity amid Regional Transformations: Economic Policy, Clientelism, and Migration Flows

Jana Morgan; Jonathan Hartlyn; Rosario Espinal


Politics & Gender | 2008

Gender Politics in the Dominican Republic: Advances for Women, Ambivalence from Men

Jana Morgan; Rosario Espinal; Jonathan Hartlyn


Electoral Studies | 2009

The presidential election in the Dominican Republic, May 2008

Jonathan Hartlyn; Rosario Espinal

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Jonathan Hartlyn

University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill

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Jana Morgan

University of Tennessee

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Alissandra T Stoyan

University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill

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