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Left-Libertarian Parties: Explaining Innovation in Competitive Party Systems
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 13 June 2011
Abstract
Since the 1960s, new left-socialist or ecology parties have appeared in approximately half of the advanced Western democracies. These parties have a common set of egalitarian and libertarian tenets and appeal to younger, educated voters. The author uses macropolitical and economic data to explain the electoral success of these left-libertarian parties. While high levels of economic development are favorable preconditions for their emergence, they are best explained in terms of domestic political opportunity structures. There is little evidence that these parties are a reaction to economic and social crises in advanced democracies. The findings suggest that the rise of left-libertarian parties is the result of a new cleavage mobilized in democratic party systems rather than of transient protest.
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References
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11 See Ronald Inglehart, “The Changing Structure of Political Cleavages in Western Societies,” in Dalton et al. (fn. 2), 62, and Russell J. Dalton, “Environmentalism and Value Change in Western Democracies,” paper prepared for delivery at the Annual Meeting of the American Political Science Association, Washington, DC, August 30-September 2, 1984.
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18 In two instances, left-libertarian centrist parties in Sweden (the Center Party) and in the Netherlands (Democrats '66) actually supported conservative governments. In both instances, the voters disapproved of these alliances and the parties lost votes in subsequent elections.
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25 The fractionalization and the number of cleavages incorporated in party systems, for instance, show little association with the rise of left-libertarian parties. These common measures of party systems apparently do not capture relevant political opportunity structures to explain the new left-libertarian cohort of parties.
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36 Bürklin (fns. 27 and 29) emphasizes declining elite circulation as a cause of left-libertarian party support.
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38 Bürklin (fn. 27), Tables 7 and 8.
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