Electoral volatility is much higher in new than in advanced democracies. Some scholars contend that weak partisan ties among the electorate lie behind this high volatility. Political parties in new democracies do not invest in building strong linkages with voters, they claim; hence partisanship is not widespread, nor does it grow over time. Our view is that democratic processes do encourage the spread of partisanship and hence the stabilization of electoral outcomes over time in new democracies. But this dynamic can be masked by countervailing factors and cut short by regime instability. We expect that, all else being equal, volatility will decline over time as a new democracy matures but increase again when democracy is interrupted. We use...
The four Southern European democracies reveal greatly differing patterns of electoral volatility: t...
Why do Argentines continue to support democracy despite distrusting political institutions and polit...
Drawing on the literatures on elite transitions, factionalism and the new institutionalism, this pap...
Although Lijphart's typology of consensus and majoritarian democracy can be regarded as the most wid...
This article revisits one historical event that has been repeatedly discussed in the literature on d...
Although ideological polarization can create problems for governability and democratic stability, I ...
Abstract: On 4 June 1943, a military coup crushed Argentina’s democracy, marking the end of the oli...
How does experience with nominally democratic electoral institutions shape the politics and stabilit...
translations in this paper are my own. Why would a national political party that has been competitiv...
This article revisits one historical event that has been repeatedly discussed in the literature on d...
The democratization literature suggests a country's chances of success-fully democratizing are ...
Scholars of Latin America have focused considerable attention on electoral volatility as a broad mea...
The conventional wisdom is that for a democracy to be consolidated, all groups must have a chance to...
Why do democracies survive or break down? In this paper, we return to this classic question with an ...
Through a comparative study of Spain (1977-1989) and Argentina (1983-95), this article argues that p...
The four Southern European democracies reveal greatly differing patterns of electoral volatility: t...
Why do Argentines continue to support democracy despite distrusting political institutions and polit...
Drawing on the literatures on elite transitions, factionalism and the new institutionalism, this pap...
Although Lijphart's typology of consensus and majoritarian democracy can be regarded as the most wid...
This article revisits one historical event that has been repeatedly discussed in the literature on d...
Although ideological polarization can create problems for governability and democratic stability, I ...
Abstract: On 4 June 1943, a military coup crushed Argentina’s democracy, marking the end of the oli...
How does experience with nominally democratic electoral institutions shape the politics and stabilit...
translations in this paper are my own. Why would a national political party that has been competitiv...
This article revisits one historical event that has been repeatedly discussed in the literature on d...
The democratization literature suggests a country's chances of success-fully democratizing are ...
Scholars of Latin America have focused considerable attention on electoral volatility as a broad mea...
The conventional wisdom is that for a democracy to be consolidated, all groups must have a chance to...
Why do democracies survive or break down? In this paper, we return to this classic question with an ...
Through a comparative study of Spain (1977-1989) and Argentina (1983-95), this article argues that p...
The four Southern European democracies reveal greatly differing patterns of electoral volatility: t...
Why do Argentines continue to support democracy despite distrusting political institutions and polit...
Drawing on the literatures on elite transitions, factionalism and the new institutionalism, this pap...