Hurricane Season: Systems of Instability in Central and East European Party Politics Cover Image
  • Price 20.00 €

Hurricane Season: Systems of Instability in Central and East European Party Politics
Hurricane Season: Systems of Instability in Central and East European Party Politics

Author(s): Tim Haughton, Kevin Deegan-Krause
Subject(s): Government/Political systems, Electoral systems, History and theory of political science
Published by: SAGE Publications Ltd
Keywords: volatility; new parties; party systems; party subsystems; Central and Eastern Europe;

Summary/Abstract: The seemingly random triumph and demise of new political parties in Central and Eastern Europe actually represent a durable subsystem with relevance for party systems around the world. This article supplements existing research on volatility with new measures of party age distribution that reveal clear patterns of disruption, turnover and restabilization. These patterns emerge from stable and coherent party subsystems that follow a simple model based on three dynamics: losses by established parties, rapid gains by uncorrupted newcomers, and equally rapid newcomer losses to even newer parties. Confirmed both by electoral evidence and computer simulations, this model offers insight into the endurance of these subsystems, particularly since the very mechanisms that generate new parties’ success can preclude their ability to survive in subsequent elections. Central and Eastern European party systems offer a laboratory for understanding trends in party system volatility that are emerging in Western Europe and across the globe.

  • Issue Year: 29/2015
  • Issue No: 01
  • Page Range: 61-80
  • Page Count: 20
  • Language: English
Toggle Accessibility Mode