Decline or change? Party types and the crisis of representative democracy
Decline or change? Party types and the crisis of representative democracy
Much has been written about the decline and transformation of political parties and the more or less devastating effects of these developments for the functioning of representative democracies. It is common knowledge to party scholars, reflected in a long-standing debate concerning party-type classification, that political parties come in differing shapes. However, as there is no standard measurement strategy allowing for the objective classification of parties, core assumptions of the literature cannot be tested—including a crisis of democracy as the result of changes in the realm of political parties.
To close this gap, we deduce such a measure from the classical literature on party types, utilizing party membership, and a new measure of parties’ programmatic clarity. We provide empirical party-type classifications for 16 Western European countries from 1960s to 2010s and use them to assess the validity of the “catch-all party” hypothesis. The results show that, although mass parties are indeed declining, catch-all parties are not nearly as prevalent and successful as widely claimed. In fact, programmatic parties are by far the most common party type. Finally, we show that disappearance and emergence of certain party types have an effect on the three key functions parties fulfill in democracy: mobilization, representation, and government stability. Our findings suggest that there is no crisis of democracy provoked by general developments of political parties.
145-175
Giebler, Heiko
bf664729-6fe8-42ff-a7b0-80191349655f
Lacewell, Onawa
1bd52dcb-22ef-40f9-85d8-c0ae5b0abab3
Regel, Sven
b8c506a2-ec11-434e-b0d3-5de2c22ab245
Werner, Annika
dcafc9c0-9649-427b-b550-04d03e3c0b24
9 March 2018
Giebler, Heiko
bf664729-6fe8-42ff-a7b0-80191349655f
Lacewell, Onawa
1bd52dcb-22ef-40f9-85d8-c0ae5b0abab3
Regel, Sven
b8c506a2-ec11-434e-b0d3-5de2c22ab245
Werner, Annika
dcafc9c0-9649-427b-b550-04d03e3c0b24
Giebler, Heiko, Lacewell, Onawa, Regel, Sven and Werner, Annika
(2018)
Decline or change? Party types and the crisis of representative democracy.
In,
Democracy and Crisis.
Springer Nature, .
(doi:10.1007/978-3-319-72559-8_7).
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Book Section
Abstract
Much has been written about the decline and transformation of political parties and the more or less devastating effects of these developments for the functioning of representative democracies. It is common knowledge to party scholars, reflected in a long-standing debate concerning party-type classification, that political parties come in differing shapes. However, as there is no standard measurement strategy allowing for the objective classification of parties, core assumptions of the literature cannot be tested—including a crisis of democracy as the result of changes in the realm of political parties.
To close this gap, we deduce such a measure from the classical literature on party types, utilizing party membership, and a new measure of parties’ programmatic clarity. We provide empirical party-type classifications for 16 Western European countries from 1960s to 2010s and use them to assess the validity of the “catch-all party” hypothesis. The results show that, although mass parties are indeed declining, catch-all parties are not nearly as prevalent and successful as widely claimed. In fact, programmatic parties are by far the most common party type. Finally, we show that disappearance and emergence of certain party types have an effect on the three key functions parties fulfill in democracy: mobilization, representation, and government stability. Our findings suggest that there is no crisis of democracy provoked by general developments of political parties.
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Published date: 9 March 2018
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Local EPrints ID: 498223
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/498223
PURE UUID: 87c55ac5-4e40-4a4a-8814-18c42bff54e4
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Date deposited: 12 Feb 2025 17:48
Last modified: 06 Jun 2025 02:13
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Author:
Heiko Giebler
Author:
Onawa Lacewell
Author:
Sven Regel
Author:
Annika Werner
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