First published online: 03 March 2016Why do some political parties join popular protests, whereas others abstain or even oppose them? Using a paired case-study comparison between the Russian regions, we examine political parties’ strategies towards the “For Fair Elections” movement in 2011–2012 and explain these choices through two jointly operating mechanisms: level of party institutionalisation; and co-optation. We show that despite the symbiosis of the state and political parties and overall parties’ loyalty to the regime, they differ in strategy and degree of involvement in social movements on an organisational level. We argue that the mechanism of party institutionalisation explains the switch between involvement and abstention, while ...
Modern liberal democracies demand high and equal levels of political action. Unequal levels of polit...
In my PhD thesis I disentangle the rhetorical reactions of political parties to public opinion and p...
Using surveys conducted in 1991, we find that western individual-level models of participation also ...
How does co-optation of oppositional party elites influence their protest behavior in times of cross...
My dissertation adopts an interdisciplinary approach to examine the relationship between political p...
Many competitive parties have witnessed the overthrow of competitive regimes, but the activities of ...
When the United States activists called for people to Occupy#everywhere, it is unlikely they were th...
Social movements and political parties are perceived as more and more distant from each other. While...
This article examines the macro–micro dynamics linking party membership with protest participation. ...
The article provides the first large-scale study of protest activities by political parties. The emp...
Social movements and political parties play vital and often complementary roles for democratic repre...
Die Arbeit geht der Frage nach, welchen Einfluss Kooptation von Oppositionsparteien in russischen Re...
Published online 23 June 2016This paper analyses a little-studied phenomenon: movements within parti...
This thesis examines the relationship between the two driving forces that pose a threat to the survi...
This paper studies party-movement interactions in Germany, focusing on Die Linke and the AfD, the tw...
Modern liberal democracies demand high and equal levels of political action. Unequal levels of polit...
In my PhD thesis I disentangle the rhetorical reactions of political parties to public opinion and p...
Using surveys conducted in 1991, we find that western individual-level models of participation also ...
How does co-optation of oppositional party elites influence their protest behavior in times of cross...
My dissertation adopts an interdisciplinary approach to examine the relationship between political p...
Many competitive parties have witnessed the overthrow of competitive regimes, but the activities of ...
When the United States activists called for people to Occupy#everywhere, it is unlikely they were th...
Social movements and political parties are perceived as more and more distant from each other. While...
This article examines the macro–micro dynamics linking party membership with protest participation. ...
The article provides the first large-scale study of protest activities by political parties. The emp...
Social movements and political parties play vital and often complementary roles for democratic repre...
Die Arbeit geht der Frage nach, welchen Einfluss Kooptation von Oppositionsparteien in russischen Re...
Published online 23 June 2016This paper analyses a little-studied phenomenon: movements within parti...
This thesis examines the relationship between the two driving forces that pose a threat to the survi...
This paper studies party-movement interactions in Germany, focusing on Die Linke and the AfD, the tw...
Modern liberal democracies demand high and equal levels of political action. Unequal levels of polit...
In my PhD thesis I disentangle the rhetorical reactions of political parties to public opinion and p...
Using surveys conducted in 1991, we find that western individual-level models of participation also ...