Whether power-sharing increases polarisation or not in post-conflict societies remains deeply contested. Yet, we currently lack an adequate conceptualisation of polarisation to assess the link (if any) between the two. This article offers a new conceptualisation of polarisation and uses this to gather evidence from Northern Ireland to argue that the assumption that power-sharing entrenches polarisation is not the reality that many think it is. By examining legislator voting records, speeches by party leaders, manifestos and public opinion data, we disaggregate polarisation into different issues, track it over time, and examine both elite and mass levels. We find that overall polarisation declined, albeit some limited polarisation remained i...
Acknowledgements This study was funded by the Economic and Social Research Council (Award: ES/L00732...
This article argues that the failure of Northern Ireland’s first power-sharing executive, and subseq...
Does political power sharing foster or inhibit democratisation in post-civil war states? Previous re...
Whether power-sharing increases polarisation or not in post-conflict societies remains deeply contes...
In the absence of power-sharing, minority groups in opposition have powerful incentives to substitut...
A well-functioning democracy requires a degree of mutual respect and a willingness to talk across po...
Recently, researchers and reporters have made a wide range of claims about the distributio...
In the absence of power-sharing, minority groups in opposition have powerful incentives to substitut...
This article studies the association between ethnic conflicts and political attitudes. It employs a ...
The ethnic outbidding thesis predicts centrifugal polarisation in ethnically divided party systems. ...
In this article we examine party sorting, elite cue and ideological polarization accounts of polariz...
This article argues that post-conflict consociational arrangements in ethnically divided societies i...
The ethnic outbidding thesis predicts centrifugal polarisation in ethnically divided party systems. ...
In this article we examine party sorting, elite cue and ideological polarization ac- counts of pola...
Accepting defeat in the aftermath of elections is crucial for the stability of democracies. But in t...
Acknowledgements This study was funded by the Economic and Social Research Council (Award: ES/L00732...
This article argues that the failure of Northern Ireland’s first power-sharing executive, and subseq...
Does political power sharing foster or inhibit democratisation in post-civil war states? Previous re...
Whether power-sharing increases polarisation or not in post-conflict societies remains deeply contes...
In the absence of power-sharing, minority groups in opposition have powerful incentives to substitut...
A well-functioning democracy requires a degree of mutual respect and a willingness to talk across po...
Recently, researchers and reporters have made a wide range of claims about the distributio...
In the absence of power-sharing, minority groups in opposition have powerful incentives to substitut...
This article studies the association between ethnic conflicts and political attitudes. It employs a ...
The ethnic outbidding thesis predicts centrifugal polarisation in ethnically divided party systems. ...
In this article we examine party sorting, elite cue and ideological polarization accounts of polariz...
This article argues that post-conflict consociational arrangements in ethnically divided societies i...
The ethnic outbidding thesis predicts centrifugal polarisation in ethnically divided party systems. ...
In this article we examine party sorting, elite cue and ideological polarization ac- counts of pola...
Accepting defeat in the aftermath of elections is crucial for the stability of democracies. But in t...
Acknowledgements This study was funded by the Economic and Social Research Council (Award: ES/L00732...
This article argues that the failure of Northern Ireland’s first power-sharing executive, and subseq...
Does political power sharing foster or inhibit democratisation in post-civil war states? Previous re...