This article addresses the effects of decentralisation reforms on regionalist parties' electoral strength. It takes up the debate between accommodatists' (i.e., electoral loss due to policy accommodation) and institutionalists' (i.e., electoral gain due to institutional empowerment). These effects depend on the electoral venue considered - regional or national - and on the ideological radicalism of a given regionalist party - secessionist or autonomist. This study finds that increases in the level of decentralisation are positively associated with higher scores for autonomist parties in regional elections, while they are not statistically significantly correlated with secessionist parties' electoral performances. In contrast, in national el...
In this dissertation, I ask why certain types of parties would agree to support creating or empoweri...
Over the past forty years, Western European countries have faced both pressures to decentralize and,...
Electoral politics in the larger western democracies seems to be becoming increasingly ‘denationalis...
This article addresses the effects of decentralisation reforms on regionalist parties' electoral str...
The article aims to provide a comprehensive analysis of the impact of decentralisation on regionalis...
The article aims to provide a comprehensive analysis of the impact of decentralisation on regionalis...
The literature on regionalist parties has traditionally focused on the origins of their electoral st...
The literature on regionalist parties has traditionally focused on the origins of their electoral st...
Under what conditions is decentralisation a salient issue for state-wide political parties? It is ar...
In the last three decades several countries around the world have transferred authority from their n...
The literature is still undecided on whether sub-state elections conform more to a national or regio...
© Cambridge University Press 2013. Debates about decentralization raise cultural questions of identi...
In this article I address the impact of decentralisation on the nationalisation of party systems. Ma...
Debates about decentralization raise cultural questions of identity and economic questions of redist...
The article centres on the saliency that regional decentralization has had for British, Italian, and...
In this dissertation, I ask why certain types of parties would agree to support creating or empoweri...
Over the past forty years, Western European countries have faced both pressures to decentralize and,...
Electoral politics in the larger western democracies seems to be becoming increasingly ‘denationalis...
This article addresses the effects of decentralisation reforms on regionalist parties' electoral str...
The article aims to provide a comprehensive analysis of the impact of decentralisation on regionalis...
The article aims to provide a comprehensive analysis of the impact of decentralisation on regionalis...
The literature on regionalist parties has traditionally focused on the origins of their electoral st...
The literature on regionalist parties has traditionally focused on the origins of their electoral st...
Under what conditions is decentralisation a salient issue for state-wide political parties? It is ar...
In the last three decades several countries around the world have transferred authority from their n...
The literature is still undecided on whether sub-state elections conform more to a national or regio...
© Cambridge University Press 2013. Debates about decentralization raise cultural questions of identi...
In this article I address the impact of decentralisation on the nationalisation of party systems. Ma...
Debates about decentralization raise cultural questions of identity and economic questions of redist...
The article centres on the saliency that regional decentralization has had for British, Italian, and...
In this dissertation, I ask why certain types of parties would agree to support creating or empoweri...
Over the past forty years, Western European countries have faced both pressures to decentralize and,...
Electoral politics in the larger western democracies seems to be becoming increasingly ‘denationalis...