Political party: Difference between revisions

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==The Origins==
==The Origins==
In 1967  the sociologists Seymour Lipset and Stein Rokkan traced the origins of  the party systems of the western democracies to the four "''cleavages''" that had arisen as a result of national and industrial revolutions,  which they identified as ''centre versus periphery'', ''church versus state'', ''landowners versus industrialists'', and ''capitalists versus workers'' <ref>Seymour Lipset and Stein Rokkan ''Party Systems and Voter Alliances:a cross-National Perspective''  Free Press New York  1967</ref> ; and in 2001 a group of researchers traced the subsequent  development of those party systems in a range of countries <ref>[http://www.questia.com/read/108789140  Karvonen and Kuhnle (eds)  ''Party Systems and Voter Alliances Revisited''  Routledge 2001]</ref>. Lipset and Rokkan had hypothesised that party systems had become "frozen" in those patterns but later studies indicated that, although those patterns had not changed, increasing signs of volatility  suggested the prospect of future change <ref>[http://www.psa.ac.uk/journals/pdf/2/post_617.pdf  Andrew Drummond ''Electoral Volatility and Party Decline in Western Democracies''  1970-1995  Political Studies 2006 vol 54]</ref>. Among symptoms of that prospect are the growing strength of 2green" party in Germany and of the nationalist party in Switzerland.  
In 1967  the sociologists Seymour Lipset and Stein Rokkan traced the origins of  the party systems of the western democracies to the four "''cleavages''" that had arisen as a result of national and industrial revolutions,  which they identified as ''centre versus periphery'', ''church versus state'', ''landowners versus industrialists'', and ''capitalists versus workers'' <ref>Seymour Lipset and Stein Rokkan ''Party Systems and Voter Alliances:a cross-National Perspective''  Free Press New York  1967</ref> ; and in 2001 a group of researchers traced the subsequent  development of those party systems in a range of countries <ref>[http://www.questia.com/read/108789140  Karvonen and Kuhnle (eds)  ''Party Systems and Voter Alliances Revisited''  Routledge 2001]</ref>. Lipset and Rokkan had hypothesised that party systems had become "frozen" in those patterns but later studies indicated that, although those patterns had not changed, increasing signs of volatility  suggested the prospect of future change <ref>[http://www.psa.ac.uk/journals/pdf/2/post_617.pdf  Andrew Drummond ''Electoral Volatility and Party Decline in Western Democracies''  1970-1995  Political Studies 2006 vol 54]</ref>. Among symptoms of that prospect are the growing strength of "green" party in Germany and of the nationalist party in Switzerland.


==References==
==References==
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<references/>

Revision as of 12:01, 28 November 2007

A political party is a pressure group whose objective is to participate in, or challenge, government.

The Origins

In 1967 the sociologists Seymour Lipset and Stein Rokkan traced the origins of the party systems of the western democracies to the four "cleavages" that had arisen as a result of national and industrial revolutions, which they identified as centre versus periphery, church versus state, landowners versus industrialists, and capitalists versus workers [1] ; and in 2001 a group of researchers traced the subsequent development of those party systems in a range of countries [2]. Lipset and Rokkan had hypothesised that party systems had become "frozen" in those patterns but later studies indicated that, although those patterns had not changed, increasing signs of volatility suggested the prospect of future change [3]. Among symptoms of that prospect are the growing strength of "green" party in Germany and of the nationalist party in Switzerland.

References