“…The roots of political patronage have been found in structural factors such as lower levels of economic development and poverty (Kitschelt, 2000;Kitschelt and Wilkinson, 2007;Lemarchand, 1972;Scott, 1972;Calvo and Murillo, 2004;Stokes, 2011;Wantchekon, 2003;Weitz-Shapiro, 2012), historical legacies such as the close state-society linkages in post-communist states (Kopecky and Spirova, 2011;Sehring, 2009: 76) and in the timing and nature of political party system development as well as the sequencing of the creation of party systems and professional bureaucracies (O'Dwyer, 2004;Shefter, 1994). While most studies have focused on patronage as being endemic to less developed countries, a growing body of work has examined its continued presence in modern Europe and Asia and its rise and persistence in the former-communist countries of Eastern Europe and the former Soviet Union (Kopecky, Mair and Spirova, 2012;Kopecky and Spirova, 2011;O'Dwyer, 2006).…”