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"competitive multiparty system"
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Routledge International Handbook On Electoral Debates
by
Julio Juárez-Gámiz
,
Christina Holtz-Bacha
,
Alan Schroeder
in
Americas electoral debates
,
Argentina's presidential debates
,
Campaign debates
2020
This Handbook is the first major work to comprehensively map state-of-the-art scholarship on electoral debates in comparative perspective. Leading scholars and practitioners from around the world introduce a core theoretical and conceptual framework to understand this phenomenon and point to promising directions for new research on the evolution of electoral debates and the practical considerations that different country-level experiences can offer.
Three indicators to help analyse electoral debates inform this Handbook: the level of experience of each country in the realisation of electoral debates; geopolitical characteristics linked to political influence; and democratic stability and electoral competitiveness. Chapters with examples from the Americas, Europe, Africa and the Middle East, Asia, and Oceania add richness to the volume. Each chapter:
Traces local historical, constitutive relationships between traditional forms of electoral debates and contexts of their emergence;
Compares and critiques different perspectives regarding the function of debates on democracy;
Probes, discusses, and evaluates recent and emergent theoretical resources related to campaign debates in light of a particular local experience;
Explores and assesses new or neglected local approaches to electoral debates in a changing media landscape where television is no longer the dominant form of political communication;
Provides a prospective analysis regarding the future challengers for electoral debates.
Routledge International Handbook on Electoral Debates will set the agenda for scholarship on the political communication for years to come.
Competing for the same value segments? Insight into the volatile Dutch political landscape
by
van Herk, Hester
,
Groenen, Patrick J. F.
,
van Rosmalen, Joost
in
Analysis
,
Biology and Life Sciences
,
Competitive Behavior
2018
Values are central to public debates today. Human values convey broad goals that serve as guiding principles in a person's life and value priorities differ across people in society. Groups in society holding opposing values (e.g., universalism versus security) will make different choices when voting in an election. Whereas over time, values are relatively stable, the number and type of political parties as well as the political values they communicate and disseminate have been changing. Groups of people holding the same human values may therefore vote for another (new) party in a later election. We focus on analyzing the relationship between human values and voting in elections, introducing a new methodology to analyze how value profiles relate to political support over time. We investigate the Dutch multi-party political system over five waves of the European Social Survey, spanning 2002 until 2010. Whilst previous research has focused on individual values separately and focused on voters only, we (1) distinguish groups holding a similar set of opposing and compatible values (value profile) instead of focusing on single values in the the entire population; (2) incorporate a correction for differences in scale use in our model; (3) compare voting over time; (4) include non-voters, a growing group in Dutch society. We find evidence that specific value profiles are related to voting for a specific set of political parties. We also find that specific value profiles distinguish non-voters from voters and that voters for populist parties resemble non-voters.
Journal Article
Cambodia in 2017
2018
After local elections in 2017, the Cambodian People's Party intensified its attacks on free media, NGOs, and the Cambodian National Rescue Party. Meanwhile, stronger links to China and waningWestern leverage are enabling Prime Minister Hun Sen to transform the post-1993 multiparty system into a patrimonial dictatorship. Cambodia enjoyed strong economic growth but saw little improvement in its weak institutional framework, in social justice, or in economic competitiveness.
Journal Article