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@article{ Holmes2016,
 title = {The dark side of electoralism: opinion polls and voting in the 2016 Philippine presidential election},
 author = {Holmes, Ronald  D.},
 journal = {Journal of Current Southeast Asian Affairs},
 number = {3},
 pages = {15-38},
 volume = {35},
 year = {2016},
 issn = {1868-4882},
 urn = {https://nbn-resolving.org/urn:nbn:de:gbv:18-4-10082},
 abstract = {Despite the limits of elections as a mechanism to secure accountability and ensure substantive representation, the 2016 elections drew the highest turnout across elections held since the political transition in 1986, a clear indication of electoralism. The high turnout may be a result of a relatively tightly contested race, with each of the main contenders appealing to constituencies that they symbolically represent. Nonetheless, the 2016 Presidential elections remained personality-oriented, media driven and political clan dominated. The eventual winner, Rodrigo Roa Duterte, garnered the presidency given a combination of factors: the clarity of his campaign message - focused on curbing a single problem (criminality, in general, and the illegal drug trade, in particular) that he elevated as the most serious concern that the next president should address; significant support from a geographic area (Mindanao) and associated ethno-linguistic groups (i.e., Bisaya); and, serious questions of character and competence raised against his opponents (i.e. Binay, Poe and Roxas).},
 keywords = {Verbrechensbekämpfung; Kriminalität; international relations; Politik; crime fighting; Südostasien; foreign policy; öffentliche Meinung; election; Philippinen; Wahlkampf; public opinion; ethnology; election campaign; criminality; Drogenkriminalität; politics; Außenpolitik; Ethnologie; drug-related crime; Southeast Asia; internationale Beziehungen; Wahl; Philippines}}