Much has been written about what makes political parties form, persist, change and die. One factor often brought into this discussion is the availability of resources in general and of state financing of political parties in particular. However, an empirical link at the aggregate level is difficult to establish because of various issues of conceptualization, operationalization and measurement. Working at the party level and taking into consideration that state funding provides important resources that make running in elections and achieving a party’s electoral target more likely, this article provides empirical support for the claim that parties who (anticipate to be or) are being funded by the state have a higher chance of forming and surv...
This article presents an original dataset of direct public funding (DPF) of political parties across...
The literature on post-communist party politics frequently suggests that membership organizations ar...
The literature on post-communist party politics frequently suggests that membership organizations ar...
Much has been written about what makes political parties form, persist, change and die. One factor o...
Much has been written about what makes political parties form, persist, change and die. One factor o...
The number of countries offering public subsidies to political parties has vastly increased in recen...
This paper will deal with why party funding regimes in established democracies differ. It examines t...
Comparative politics has shown interest in the topic of financing political parties only recently. T...
This article investigates the dimension and evolution of the financing of political parties. It focu...
Whilst the public funding of political parties is the norm in western democracies, its comprehensive...
This thesis tests the hypothesis that increasing state subsidies to political parties cause a declin...
The work’s goal is to contribute to the discussion on cartelisation in the party systems of East Cen...
<p>Party regulation in general and its systemic consequences in particular have not been a matter of...
This article suggests that the academic emphasis on rational choice and political-sociological appro...
The literature on post-communist democracies has traditionally suggested that organisational strengt...
This article presents an original dataset of direct public funding (DPF) of political parties across...
The literature on post-communist party politics frequently suggests that membership organizations ar...
The literature on post-communist party politics frequently suggests that membership organizations ar...
Much has been written about what makes political parties form, persist, change and die. One factor o...
Much has been written about what makes political parties form, persist, change and die. One factor o...
The number of countries offering public subsidies to political parties has vastly increased in recen...
This paper will deal with why party funding regimes in established democracies differ. It examines t...
Comparative politics has shown interest in the topic of financing political parties only recently. T...
This article investigates the dimension and evolution of the financing of political parties. It focu...
Whilst the public funding of political parties is the norm in western democracies, its comprehensive...
This thesis tests the hypothesis that increasing state subsidies to political parties cause a declin...
The work’s goal is to contribute to the discussion on cartelisation in the party systems of East Cen...
<p>Party regulation in general and its systemic consequences in particular have not been a matter of...
This article suggests that the academic emphasis on rational choice and political-sociological appro...
The literature on post-communist democracies has traditionally suggested that organisational strengt...
This article presents an original dataset of direct public funding (DPF) of political parties across...
The literature on post-communist party politics frequently suggests that membership organizations ar...
The literature on post-communist party politics frequently suggests that membership organizations ar...