Introduction, Responsible Parties in Latin America, The Mexican Elections of 1958: Mfirmation of Authoritarianism?, Bases of Support for Mexico's Dominant Party, Democratic Political Campaigning in Latin America: A Typological Approach to Cross-Cultural Research, Political Primitivism, Differential Socialization, and Lower-Class Leftist Radicalism, The Scope of the Chilean Party System, Social Structure, Social Context, and Partisan Mobilization: Urban Workers in Chile, The Socio-Economic Determinants of Popular-Authoritarian Electoral Behavior: The Case of Peronism, Criticism, Cynicism, and Political Evaluation: A Venezuelan Example, Political Participation in Latin America: Levels, Structure, Context, Concentration and Rationality, Electoral Change in the One-Party Dominant Mexican Polity, 1958-73: Evidence from Mexico City, The Popular Parties: Brazil and Argentina in a Latin American Perspective, Incumbency and Electoral Turnover in Latin America, Electoral Struggles in a Neighborhood on the Periphery of Sao Paulo, Political Parties and Democratization in Brazil and the Southern Cone, Attitudes Towards Democracy in Argentina During the Transition Period, Formal Versus Substantive Democracy: Poor People's Politics in Mexico City, The Brazilian Voter in Democratic Transition, 1974-1982, Whither the PRJ? Explaining Voter Defection in the 1988, Mexican Presidential Elections, Acknowledgments