Previous research suggests that political parties learn from and emulate the successful election strategies of governing parties in other countries. But what explains variation in the degree of influence that governing parties have on their foreign counterparts? We argue that clarity of responsibility within government, or the concentration of executive responsibility in the hands of a dominant governing party, allows parties to learn from the most obviously electorally successful incumbents. It therefore enhances the cross-national diffusion of party programs. To test this expectation, we analyze parties’ policy positions in twenty-six established democracies since 1977. Our results indicate that parties disproportionately learn from and e...
Political parties learn from successful foreign parties. But does the scope of this crossnational po...
We examine the degree to which party leaders dominate their parties over time and across countries a...
Studies of economic voting have demonstrated that the relationship between citizens’ satisfaction wi...
Previous research suggests that political parties learn from and emulate the successful election str...
Previous research suggests that political parties learn from and emulate the successful election str...
Do parties learn from or emulate parties in other political systems? This research develops the argu...
parties learn from or emulate parties in other political systems? This research develops the argumen...
Previous research suggests that political parties respond to left–right policy positions of successf...
Political parties learn from foreign incumbents, i.e., parties abroad that won office. But does the ...
Political parties learn from foreign incumbents, that is, parties abroad that won office. But does t...
Previous research reports that parties in established European democracies learn from and emulate th...
Political party organizations play large roles in democracies, yet their organizations differ widely...
Using OLS regression with World Values Survey data across 18 OECD countries, I make two major argume...
<p>Studies of policy attention find only mixed support for a partisan impact, instead showing that p...
We examine the degree to which party leaders dominate their parties over time and across countries a...
Political parties learn from successful foreign parties. But does the scope of this crossnational po...
We examine the degree to which party leaders dominate their parties over time and across countries a...
Studies of economic voting have demonstrated that the relationship between citizens’ satisfaction wi...
Previous research suggests that political parties learn from and emulate the successful election str...
Previous research suggests that political parties learn from and emulate the successful election str...
Do parties learn from or emulate parties in other political systems? This research develops the argu...
parties learn from or emulate parties in other political systems? This research develops the argumen...
Previous research suggests that political parties respond to left–right policy positions of successf...
Political parties learn from foreign incumbents, i.e., parties abroad that won office. But does the ...
Political parties learn from foreign incumbents, that is, parties abroad that won office. But does t...
Previous research reports that parties in established European democracies learn from and emulate th...
Political party organizations play large roles in democracies, yet their organizations differ widely...
Using OLS regression with World Values Survey data across 18 OECD countries, I make two major argume...
<p>Studies of policy attention find only mixed support for a partisan impact, instead showing that p...
We examine the degree to which party leaders dominate their parties over time and across countries a...
Political parties learn from successful foreign parties. But does the scope of this crossnational po...
We examine the degree to which party leaders dominate their parties over time and across countries a...
Studies of economic voting have demonstrated that the relationship between citizens’ satisfaction wi...