Do Multi-Party Municipal Councils Improve Local Governance? Municipal Councillors’ Opinions in El Salvador

As decentralisation reforms devolved greater responsibilities to local governments, improving local governance has become central to strengthening democracy. With the promise of increasing citizen representation and government transparency at the local level, in 2015 El Salvador implemented a new el...

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Main Authors: Abby Córdova, Annabella España-Nájera
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: SAGE Publishing 2021-08-01
Series:Journal of Politics in Latin America
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1177/1866802X211015506
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spelling doaj-c41663ba4d76438fb8127a140d00c5672021-08-17T21:33:42ZengSAGE PublishingJournal of Politics in Latin America1866-802X1868-48902021-08-011310.1177/1866802X211015506Do Multi-Party Municipal Councils Improve Local Governance? Municipal Councillors’ Opinions in El SalvadorAbby Córdova0Annabella España-Nájera1 Keough School of Global Affairs, University of Notre Dame, Notre Dame, IN, USA Department of Chicano and Latin American Studies, California State University Fresno, Fresno, CA, USAAs decentralisation reforms devolved greater responsibilities to local governments, improving local governance has become central to strengthening democracy. With the promise of increasing citizen representation and government transparency at the local level, in 2015 El Salvador implemented a new electoral system. The new system allowed for the election of opposition parties in municipal councils for the first time. In the context of El Salvador, we examine how opposition parties’ numerical representation influences the views of governing and opposition party members about multi-party councils’ effectiveness to improve local governance. To test our hypotheses, we rely on data from an original elite survey of 303 municipal councillors in 101 municipalities, which we complement with qualitative information. Contrary to what the literature suggests, we do not find evidence that a stronger opposition leads to more negative evaluations among members of governing parties, notwithstanding the country’s polarised party system.https://doi.org/10.1177/1866802X211015506
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Abby Córdova
Annabella España-Nájera
spellingShingle Abby Córdova
Annabella España-Nájera
Do Multi-Party Municipal Councils Improve Local Governance? Municipal Councillors’ Opinions in El Salvador
Journal of Politics in Latin America
author_facet Abby Córdova
Annabella España-Nájera
author_sort Abby Córdova
title Do Multi-Party Municipal Councils Improve Local Governance? Municipal Councillors’ Opinions in El Salvador
title_short Do Multi-Party Municipal Councils Improve Local Governance? Municipal Councillors’ Opinions in El Salvador
title_full Do Multi-Party Municipal Councils Improve Local Governance? Municipal Councillors’ Opinions in El Salvador
title_fullStr Do Multi-Party Municipal Councils Improve Local Governance? Municipal Councillors’ Opinions in El Salvador
title_full_unstemmed Do Multi-Party Municipal Councils Improve Local Governance? Municipal Councillors’ Opinions in El Salvador
title_sort do multi-party municipal councils improve local governance? municipal councillors’ opinions in el salvador
publisher SAGE Publishing
series Journal of Politics in Latin America
issn 1866-802X
1868-4890
publishDate 2021-08-01
description As decentralisation reforms devolved greater responsibilities to local governments, improving local governance has become central to strengthening democracy. With the promise of increasing citizen representation and government transparency at the local level, in 2015 El Salvador implemented a new electoral system. The new system allowed for the election of opposition parties in municipal councils for the first time. In the context of El Salvador, we examine how opposition parties’ numerical representation influences the views of governing and opposition party members about multi-party councils’ effectiveness to improve local governance. To test our hypotheses, we rely on data from an original elite survey of 303 municipal councillors in 101 municipalities, which we complement with qualitative information. Contrary to what the literature suggests, we do not find evidence that a stronger opposition leads to more negative evaluations among members of governing parties, notwithstanding the country’s polarised party system.
url https://doi.org/10.1177/1866802X211015506
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