Clientelism and Policy : A Cross-Over StudyVol. 30, 2023/3-4 - pagesPages 5 to 10Presentation of the special issueBy Jean-Louis Briquet, Damien Deschamps, Olivier ProviniPages 11 to 51Public action and political clientelism: dangerous liaisonsBy Jean-Louis Briquet, Olivier ProviniPages 53 to 77“Ordinary, yet highly denounced practices”. Reflections on the clientelist dimension of public policies, based on the Marseilles laboratoryBy Cesare MattinaPages 79 to 109How the logic of proximity interferes with the deployment of public action: cross-views of development policies in two coca-producing regionsBy Romain BusnelPages 111 to 141A clientelist facade: policymaking and clientelist interests in a pension programme in UgandaBy Ronan JacquinPages 143 to 173Model city to murder city: public housing, progressive policymakers and clientelistic city-hall politicians in post-apartheid Durban, South AfricaBy Timothy GibbsPages 175 to 205The French state, a stakeholder in patronage networks : the case study of the employment policies in the Reunion Island since 1946By Damien Deschamps, Olivier ProviniPages 207 to 231The crises of party clientelism and low territorial representation. The shape and space of personal consensus in NaplesBy Luciano BrancaccioPages 233 to 266How do economic social movements manage to act in and on the market despite adversity? The case of cooperative renewable energy projects in France and the United KingdomBy Pierre WokuriPages 267 to 301Populist radical right parties and democracy during the COVID-19 pandemic: A comparative analysis of statements made by Rassemblement national and Vlaams BelangBy Anthony RicottaPages 303 to 315ReviewsBy Delphine Deschaux-Dutard, Anne-Cécile Douillet, Camille Bedock