This study examines whether (and how) parties adapt to party system saturation (PSS). A party system is oversaturated when a higher effective number of parties contests elections than predicted. Previous research has shown that parties are more likely to exit when party systems are oversaturated. This article examines whether parties will adapt by increasing the nicheness of their policy platform, by forming electoral alliances or by merging. Based on time-series analyses of 522 parties contesting 357 elections in twenty-one established Western democracies between 1945 and 2011, the study finds that parties are more likely to enter - and less likely to leave - electoral alliances if PSS increases. Additionally, a small share of older partie...
Political parties are central actors in modern democracies. Whether, and how, parties and party syst...
This work is an analysis of party policy change over time. So far, the predominant models of party c...
In recent years, and particularly following the impact of the “great recession”, Western European pa...
This study examines whether (and how) parties adapt to party system saturation (PSS). A party system...
This study examines whether and how parties adapt to party system saturation. A party system is over...
This study examines whether (and how) parties adapt to party system saturation (PSS). A party system...
The turnover of political parties is a key mechanism of renewal of electoral choices. We present an ...
The turnover of political parties is a key mechanism of renewal of electoral choices. We present an ...
I argue that the costs of entry, benefits of office and the probability of receiving electoral suppo...
Western democracies exhibit a remarkable continuity and stability in their party systems. Parties th...
This study examines how ideological incongruence between voters and parties influences the entry of ...
The variables explaining party system fragmentation have been investigated extensively, but little i...
Theories that explain variations in party systems typically emphasize the role of political institut...
The variables explaining party system fragmentation have been investigated extensively, but little i...
Political parties are central actors in modern democracies. Whether, and how, parties and party syst...
Political parties are central actors in modern democracies. Whether, and how, parties and party syst...
This work is an analysis of party policy change over time. So far, the predominant models of party c...
In recent years, and particularly following the impact of the “great recession”, Western European pa...
This study examines whether (and how) parties adapt to party system saturation (PSS). A party system...
This study examines whether and how parties adapt to party system saturation. A party system is over...
This study examines whether (and how) parties adapt to party system saturation (PSS). A party system...
The turnover of political parties is a key mechanism of renewal of electoral choices. We present an ...
The turnover of political parties is a key mechanism of renewal of electoral choices. We present an ...
I argue that the costs of entry, benefits of office and the probability of receiving electoral suppo...
Western democracies exhibit a remarkable continuity and stability in their party systems. Parties th...
This study examines how ideological incongruence between voters and parties influences the entry of ...
The variables explaining party system fragmentation have been investigated extensively, but little i...
Theories that explain variations in party systems typically emphasize the role of political institut...
The variables explaining party system fragmentation have been investigated extensively, but little i...
Political parties are central actors in modern democracies. Whether, and how, parties and party syst...
Political parties are central actors in modern democracies. Whether, and how, parties and party syst...
This work is an analysis of party policy change over time. So far, the predominant models of party c...
In recent years, and particularly following the impact of the “great recession”, Western European pa...