© 2018, © 2018 Informa UK Limited, trading as Taylor & Francis Group. This article analyzes how the question of democracy divided the post-war European socialist parties. Contrary to conventional historiographical wisdom, it demonstrates that the socialist conversion to the classic liberal model of elections, parliaments and constitutions was hardly a self-evident or uncontested affair. To this end, it focuses on two sets of parties that adopted widely divergent attitudes to parliamentary democracy. On the one side, the Czechoslovak Social Democratic Party and the French Socialist Party considered free and fair elections, sovereign parliaments and constitutional checks and balances sacrosanct. On the other, the Italian Socialist Party and...
The article compares the causes of the crisis in democracy in Austria and Germany between 1930 and 1...
This article investigates the ways in which political parties are codified in modern democratic cons...
This paper is divided in six sections. Section one briefly reviews the debate on democratisation as ...
This article explores how political parties in France, West Germany, and Italy conceptualized democr...
This dissertation is a comparative study of the contestation of conceptions, institutions and practi...
This article examines the Czechoslovak “People’s Democracy” during the so-called Third Republic afte...
This article addresses the nature, intensity and impact of debates and divisions over British member...
This article addresses the nature, intensity and impact of debates and divisions over British member...
This article analyses changes in party-manifesto references to democracy in post-war Britain, the Fr...
The gap between the narratives of democracy and the practices of power has been a significant source...
This article argues that the rise of parties as ‘public utilities’, that is, semi-state organs cruci...
This article studies the ideological roots of the particular form of party democracy that was establ...
The establishment of capitalist democracies in East-Central Europe raises the question of whether ex...
Contrary to classical theory in political science, the “consensus between elites” may not be a neces...
Defence date: 16 May 2016Examining Board: Professor Federico Romero (Supervisor, EUI); Professor Luc...
The article compares the causes of the crisis in democracy in Austria and Germany between 1930 and 1...
This article investigates the ways in which political parties are codified in modern democratic cons...
This paper is divided in six sections. Section one briefly reviews the debate on democratisation as ...
This article explores how political parties in France, West Germany, and Italy conceptualized democr...
This dissertation is a comparative study of the contestation of conceptions, institutions and practi...
This article examines the Czechoslovak “People’s Democracy” during the so-called Third Republic afte...
This article addresses the nature, intensity and impact of debates and divisions over British member...
This article addresses the nature, intensity and impact of debates and divisions over British member...
This article analyses changes in party-manifesto references to democracy in post-war Britain, the Fr...
The gap between the narratives of democracy and the practices of power has been a significant source...
This article argues that the rise of parties as ‘public utilities’, that is, semi-state organs cruci...
This article studies the ideological roots of the particular form of party democracy that was establ...
The establishment of capitalist democracies in East-Central Europe raises the question of whether ex...
Contrary to classical theory in political science, the “consensus between elites” may not be a neces...
Defence date: 16 May 2016Examining Board: Professor Federico Romero (Supervisor, EUI); Professor Luc...
The article compares the causes of the crisis in democracy in Austria and Germany between 1930 and 1...
This article investigates the ways in which political parties are codified in modern democratic cons...
This paper is divided in six sections. Section one briefly reviews the debate on democratisation as ...