Dictators Walking the Mogadishu Line : How Men Become Monsters and Monsters Become Men
History offers many examples of dictators who worsened their behavior significantly over time (like Zimbabwe's Mugabe) as well as dictators who displayed remarkable improvements (like Rawlings of Ghana). The authors show that such mutations ca...
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okr-10986-248592021-04-23T14:04:27Z Dictators Walking the Mogadishu Line : How Men Become Monsters and Monsters Become Men Larcom, Shaun Sarr, Mare Willems, Tim dictatorship learning multiple steady states political violence repression resource curse History offers many examples of dictators who worsened their behavior significantly over time (like Zimbabwe's Mugabe) as well as dictators who displayed remarkable improvements (like Rawlings of Ghana). The authors show that such mutations can result from rational behavior when the dictator's flow use of repression is complementary to his stock of wrongdoings: past wrongdoings then perpetuate further wrongdoings and the dictator can unintentionally get trapped in a repressive steady state where he himself suffers from ex-post regret. This then begs the question why such a dictator would ever choose to do wrong in the first place. The authors show that this can be explained from the dictator's uncertainty over his degree of impunity in relation to wrongdoing, which induces him to experiment along this dimension. This produces a setting where any individual rising to power can end up as either a moderate leader, or as a dreaded tyrant. Since derailment is accidental and accompanied by ex-post regret, increasing accountability can be in the interest of both the public and the dictator. 2016-08-10T14:48:21Z 2016-08-10T14:48:21Z 2016-08 Working Paper http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/2016/08/26628865/dictators-walking-mogadishu-line-men-monsters-monsters-men http://hdl.handle.net/10986/24859 English en_US Policy Research Working Paper;No. 7778 CC BY 3.0 IGO http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/igo/ World Bank World Bank, Washington, DC Publications & Research Publications & Research :: Policy Research Working Paper Africa Sub-Saharan Africa |
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Digital Repository |
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Foreign Institution |
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Digital Repositories |
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World Bank Open Knowledge Repository |
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World Bank |
language |
English en_US |
topic |
dictatorship learning multiple steady states political violence repression resource curse |
spellingShingle |
dictatorship learning multiple steady states political violence repression resource curse Larcom, Shaun Sarr, Mare Willems, Tim Dictators Walking the Mogadishu Line : How Men Become Monsters and Monsters Become Men |
geographic_facet |
Africa Sub-Saharan Africa |
relation |
Policy Research Working Paper;No. 7778 |
description |
History offers many examples of
dictators who worsened their behavior significantly over
time (like Zimbabwe's Mugabe) as well as dictators who
displayed remarkable improvements (like Rawlings of Ghana).
The authors show that such mutations can result from
rational behavior when the dictator's flow use of
repression is complementary to his stock of wrongdoings:
past wrongdoings then perpetuate further wrongdoings and the
dictator can unintentionally get trapped in a repressive
steady state where he himself suffers from ex-post regret.
This then begs the question why such a dictator would ever
choose to do wrong in the first place. The authors show that
this can be explained from the dictator's uncertainty
over his degree of impunity in relation to wrongdoing, which
induces him to experiment along this dimension. This
produces a setting where any individual rising to power can
end up as either a moderate leader, or as a dreaded tyrant.
Since derailment is accidental and accompanied by ex-post
regret, increasing accountability can be in the interest of
both the public and the dictator. |
format |
Working Paper |
author |
Larcom, Shaun Sarr, Mare Willems, Tim |
author_facet |
Larcom, Shaun Sarr, Mare Willems, Tim |
author_sort |
Larcom, Shaun |
title |
Dictators Walking the Mogadishu Line : How Men Become Monsters and Monsters Become Men |
title_short |
Dictators Walking the Mogadishu Line : How Men Become Monsters and Monsters Become Men |
title_full |
Dictators Walking the Mogadishu Line : How Men Become Monsters and Monsters Become Men |
title_fullStr |
Dictators Walking the Mogadishu Line : How Men Become Monsters and Monsters Become Men |
title_full_unstemmed |
Dictators Walking the Mogadishu Line : How Men Become Monsters and Monsters Become Men |
title_sort |
dictators walking the mogadishu line : how men become monsters and monsters become men |
publisher |
World Bank, Washington, DC |
publishDate |
2016 |
url |
http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/2016/08/26628865/dictators-walking-mogadishu-line-men-monsters-monsters-men http://hdl.handle.net/10986/24859 |
_version_ |
1764457841592107008 |