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Legislators in Networks: Corruption, Clientelism, and Law-Making in Ukraine

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Registration REQUIRED by 4pm on January 29, 2025 in order to attend this event.

Please join the Ukrainian Studies Program at the Harriman Institute for a lecture by Anastasiia Vlasenko, Postdoctoral Research Scholar at the Harriman Institute. Moderated by Mark Andryczyk.

How do legislative networks affect politics? This project examines the effect of lawmakers’ ties in the Ukrainian parliament on corruption, political survival, and law-making activities. In addition to conventional party and and faction ties, Ukrainian legislators tend to form networks through unelected parliamentary staff where personal legislative assistants serve as human links between members of parliament. Dr. Vlasenko suggests that a higher number of legislator’s ties within such networks is associated with increased returns to office through participation in corruption schemes, better chances of reelection, and higher frequency of legislator co-sponsorship. This effect of legislative networks exists due to proliferation of clientelist relations aided by Ukrainian oligarchs. The study implies that rent-seeking and vote-buying behavior is made possible by low levels of accountability and transparency which are typical for countries with weak democratic institutions.

Anastasiia Vlasenko's headshot

Dr. Anastasiia Vlasenko is a Postdoctoral Research Scholar in the Harriman Institute at Columbia University. She is also a recent HURI Research Fellow at Harvard’s Ukrainian Research Institute and a recent Postdoctoral Fellow at the NYU Jordan Center for the Advanced Study of Russia. She studies legislative politics and democratization with specialization in politics of Ukraine. Her monograph project, ‘Legislators in Networks: Corruption, Clientelism, and Law Making” investigates how legislative networks formed through parliamentary aids can affect rent-seeking behavior in the Ukrainian parliament. Vlasenko is particularly interested in the study of corruption, legislative politics, transitional period reforms, propaganda, electoral politics, and forecasting. Her research has been published in the Journal of Politics. Vlasenko received her Ph.D. from the Department of Political Sciences at Florida State University in 2022. In 2020-2021, she worked at the Hertie School in Berlin as a visiting researcher. At Florida State University and New York University, Vlasenko taught courses on comparative politics, public policy, quantitative methods, and post-Soviet studies.

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