'Break-in parties' and changing patterns of democracy in Latin America
Data
2016
Título da Revista
ISSN da Revista
Título de Volume
Editor
Resumo
Although Lijphart's typology of consensus and majoritarian democracy can be regarded as the most widely used tool to classify democratic regimes, it has been rarely applied to Latin America so far.
It tries to fill this gap by adapting Lijphart's typological framework to the Latin American context in the following way. In contrast to previous studies, it treats the type of democracy as an independent variable and include informal factors such as clientelism or informal employment in our assessment of democratic patterns. On this basis, it aims to answer the following questions. First, how did the patterns of democracy evolve in Latin America over the two decades between 1990 and 2010 and
what kind of differences can be observed in the region? Second, what are the institutional determinants of the observed changes? It focuses on the emergence of new parties because of their strong impact on the first dimension of Lijphart's typology. From our observations it draws the following tentative conclusions: If strong new parties established themselves in the party system but failed to gain the presidency, they pushed the system towards consensualism. Conversely, new parties that gained the presidency produced more majoritarian traits.
Periodicidade
Notas de conteúdo
Assunto(s)
Outro(s) assunto(s)
Referência
KESTLER, Thomas; BAUTISTA LUCCA, Juan; KRAUSE, Silvana. 'Break-in parties' and changing patterns of democracy in Latin America. Brazilian Political Science Review, São Paulo, v. 10, n. 1, p. 1-31, 2016. DOI: http://dx.doi.org/10.1590/1981-38212016000100004.
Coleções
Avaliação
Revisão
Suplementado Por
Referenciado Por
Licença Creative Commons
Exceto quando indicado de outra forma, a licença deste item é descrita como Creative Commons Atribuição-CompartilhaIgual 4.0 Internacional

