Intra-Party Politics and Coalition Governments

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coalitional
cohesion
Conditional Logit Model
discipline
empirical analysis of coalition formation
EPP
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European Parliament
European Parliament studies
European Party Group
Inter-party Conflict
Interparty Conflict
Intra-party Conflict
Intra-party Differences
Intra-party Politics
Intraparty Conflict
Intraparty Politics
leader
legislative behaviour
Minimal Winning Coalitions
multilevel governance
National Party Voters
NATO Treaty
parliamentary democracy
Party Cohesion
party discipline
Party Group
Party Group Cohesion
Party Voting Unity
policy position estimation
Political Parties
portfolio
Portfolio Allocation
Portuguese Local Government
roll
Roll Call Votes
Scottish Labour
Single Member Districts
Unitary Actor Assumption
voting

Product details

  • ISBN 9780415462259
  • Weight: 630g
  • Dimensions: 156 x 234mm
  • Publication Date: 16 Oct 2008
  • Publisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd
  • Publication City/Country: GB
  • Product Form: Hardback
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This book explores how intra-party politics affects government formation and termination in parliamentary systems, where the norm is the formation of coalition governments.

The authors look beyond party cohesion and discipline in parliamentary democracies to take a broader view, assuming a diversity of preferences among party members and then exploring the incentives that give rise to coordinated party behaviour at the electoral, legislative and executive levels. The chapters in this book share a common analytical framework, confronting theoretical models of government formation with empirical data, some drawn from cross-national analyses and others from theoretically structured case studies. A distinctive feature of the book is that it explores the impact of intra-party politics at different levels of government: national, local and EU. This offers the opportunity to investigate existing theories of coalition formation in new political settings. Finally, the book offers a range of innovative methods for investigating intra-party politics which, for example, creates a need to estimate the policy positions of individual politicians inside political parties.

This book will be of interest to political scientists, especially scholars involved in research on political parties, parliamentary systems, coalition formation and legislative behaviour, multilevel governance, European and EU politics.

Daniela Giannetti is Professor of Political Science at the University of Bologna, Italy. Kenneth Benoit is Professor of Quantitative Social Sciences in the Political Science Department at Trinity College, Dublin