Synopses & Reviews
Is the party over? Parties are the central institutions of representative democracy, but critics increasingly claim that parties are failing to perform their democratic functions.
Political Parties and Democratic Linkage assembles unprecedented cross-national evidence to assess how parties link the individual citizen to the formation of governments and then to government policies. Using the Comparative Study of Electoral Systems and other recent cross-national data, the authors examine the workings of this party linkage process across established and new democracies. Political parties still dominate the electoral process in shaping the discourse of campaigns, the selection of candidates, and mobilizing citizens to vote. Equally striking, parties link citizen preferences to the choice of representatives, with strong congruence between voter and party Left/Right positions. These preferences are then translated in the formation of coalition governments and their policies.
The authors argue that the critics of parties have overlooked the ability of political parties to adapt to changing conditions in order to perform their crucial linkage functions. As the context of politics and societies have changed, so too have political parties. Political Parties and Democratic Linkage argues that the process of party government is alive and well in most contemporary democracies.
Review
"Political Parties and Democratic Linkage offers a valiant defence of the often lamented role of parties in contemporary democratic processes. Dalton, Farrell and McAllister argue that despite their poor public image, parties still dominate elections, that newly incumbent governments are more closely connected to citizen preferences than their predecessors in office, and that voter opinion, operating through parties, matters for policy outputs. This is an important book for students of parties as well as for students of democracy."--Peter Mair, Professor of Comparative Politics, European University Institute, Florence
About the Author
Russell J. Dalton is Professor of Political Science and founding director of the Center for the Study of Democracy at University of California-Irvine. Dalton has been awarded a Fulbright Research Fellowship, Scholar-in-Residence at the Barbra Streisand Center, German Marshall Fund Research Fellowship, and the POSCO Fellowship at the East West Center in Hawaii.
David M. Farrell is Professor of Politics and Head of the School of Politics and International Relations at University College Dublin. He is a specialist in the study of parties and electoral systems, founding co-editor of Party Politics, and co-editor of the ECPR/Oxford University Press series, Comparative Politics.
Ian McAllister is Distinguished Professor of Political Science at Australian National University.
He has been director of the Australian Election Study since 1987, and was Chair of the Comparative Study of Electoral System project from 2004 to 2009. He is a Fellow of the Academy of Social Sciences in Australia and a Corresponding Member of the Royal Society of Edinburgh.
Table of Contents
Part One: Introduction 1. Parties and Representative Government
Part Two: Parties and Election Campaigns
2. Parties and Electoral Institutions
3. Party Mobilization and Campaign Participation
Part Three: Electoral Choice
4. Citizens and their Policy Preferences
5. Party Images and Party Linkage
6. Voter Choice and Partisan Representation
Part Four: Parties in Government
7. Government Formation and Democratic Representation
8. Party Policies and Policy Outputs
Part Five: Conclusion
9. Party Evolution
Index