Events

Past Event

Lawmaking under Authoritarianism in Argentina, Brazil, and Spain

April 22, 2026
12:00 PM - 1:00 PM
America/New_York
International Affairs Building, 420 W. 118 St., New York, NY 10027 Room 802

​Book Talk: Lawmaking under Authoritarianism in Argentina, Brazil, and Spain

Why are legislatures in some authoritarian regimes more powerful than others? Why does influence on policies and politics vary across dictatorships? To answer these questions, Lawmaking under Authoritarianism extends the power-sharing theory of authoritarian government to argue that autocracies with balanced factional politics have more influential legislatures than regimes with unbalanced or unstable factional politics. Where factional politics is balanced, autocracies have reviser legislatures that amend and reject significant shares of executive initiatives and are able to block or reverse policies preferred by dictators. When factional politics is unbalanced, notary legislatures may amend executive bills but rarely reject them, and regimes with unstable factional politics oscillate between these two extremes. Lawmaking under Authoritarianism employs novel datasets based on extensive archival research to support these findings, including strong qualitative case studies for past dictatorships in Argentina, Brazil, and Spain.

Speaker Bio:

Alejandro Bonvecchi is Professor of Political Science at Universidad Torcuato Di Tella and Independent Researcher at the National Council of Scientific and Technical Research (CONICET). He has been a Visiting Professor at Yale University, a Research Fellow at the Kellogg Institute for International Affairs at Notre Dame University, a Fulbright Fellow at the Institute for International Economic Policy at George Washington University, a DAAD Fellow at GIGA Hamburg, and is currently a Tinker Visiting Professor at the University of Chicago. His work focuses on the political economy of decision-making in legislatures and executives about economic and social policies. This is his sixth book.

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