... Clarifies its overall claim about clientelism, a distorting and arbitrary distributive pattern that could be improved. Those interested in these issues should thus not miss this highly recommendable book. Political Studies Review
Contributors 
Preface
Acknowledgments
Introduction. Evaluating Political Clientelism
Part I: Lessons in Clientelism from Latin America
Chapter 1. Partisan Linkages and Social Policy Delivery in Argentina and Chile 
Chapter 2. Chile's Education Transfers, 2001–2009 
Chapter 3. The Future of Peru's Brokered Democracy 
Chapter 4. Teachers, Mayors, and the Transformation of Clientelism in Colombia 
Chapter 5. Lessons Learned While Studying Clientelistic Politics in the Gray Zone
Chapter 6. Political Clientelism and Social Policy in Brazil 
Part II: Lessons in Clientelism from Other Regions 
Chapter 7. Patronage, Democracy, and Ethnic Politics in India 
Chapter 8. Linking Capital and Countryside: Patronage and Clientelism in Japan, Thailand, and the Philippines 
Chapter 9. Eastern European Postcommunist Variants of Political Clientelism and Social Policy 
Chapter 10. The Democratization of Clientelism in Sub-Saharan Africa 
Conclusion: Defining Political Clientelism's Persistence 
Index
—Kenneth F. Greene, The University of Texas at Austin