The Golden State’s innovative approaches to ballot access should be studied widely.
Didi Kuo is a nonresident scholar at Carnegie California. She is also a center fellow at the Freeman-Spogli Institute for International Studies at Stanford University and associate director for research at the Center on Democracy, Development, and the Rule of Law. She is a scholar of democratization and political parties. Her first book, Clientelism, Capitalism, and Democracy: the Rise of Programmatic Politics in the United States and Britain, was published by Cambridge University Press in 2018. She received a PhD from Harvard University, an MSc from Oxford University, where she studied as a Marshall Scholar, and a BA from Emory University.
The Golden State’s innovative approaches to ballot access should be studied widely.
Ideas, experiences, and lessons from other countries are not panaceas but, if properly researched, disseminated, and discussed, they can magnify the reform moment in the United States.