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This book examines the effects of preferential voting on intraparty
electoral competition and voting behavior. Using data covering 19
countries and over 200 elections, this study sheds light on a
somewhat neglected aspect of electoral systems. The author
demonstrates that the ability of voters to influence the selection
and deselection of MPs under preferential voting systems is not as
important as is often assumed. Instead, their ability to shape the
election of a given candidate depends heavily on the balance
between party power and voter power. In this way, this book
advances the understanding of the effect of preferential voting on
intra-party dynamics, parliamentary turnover, and voter behavior.
Based on a rigorous, data-led methodological approach, the book
contributes to both the theory and practice of the study of
electoral systems, and should be read by scholars, students and
practitioners interested in preferential voting systems.
This book explains why the level of party presidentialization
varies from one country to another. It considers the effects of
constitutional structures as well as the party's original features,
and argues that the degree of party presidentialization varies as a
function of the party's genetics.
This book examines the process of presidentialisation of political
parties in the Western Balkans. The Western Balkan countries
deserve to be analysed in a comparative perspective due to their
distinctive features in terms of processes of democratization,
forms of government and institutional assets, the presence of
social cleavages (religious, linguistic, ethnic), and, of course,
the nature of political parties which differs from other European
cases, especially in terms of origins, organization and structure.
However, Western Balkan political parties do show certain
similarities with other West European cases where power is
centralised and held by the parties' leadership. The book
ultimately attempts to test whether and to what extent the
influence of institutional variables affects the level of
presidentialisation of political parties, also considering the
parties' organization features.
This book explains why the level of party presidentialization
varies from one country to another. It considers the effects of
constitutional structures as well as the party's original features,
and argues that the degree of party presidentialization varies as a
function of the party's genetics.
This book examines the process of presidentialisation of political
parties in the Western Balkans. The Western Balkan countries
deserve to be analysed in a comparative perspective due to their
distinctive features in terms of processes of democratization,
forms of government and institutional assets, the presence of
social cleavages (religious, linguistic, ethnic), and, of course,
the nature of political parties which differs from other European
cases, especially in terms of origins, organization and structure.
However, Western Balkan political parties do show certain
similarities with other West European cases where power is
centralised and held by the parties' leadership. The book
ultimately attempts to test whether and to what extent the
influence of institutional variables affects the level of
presidentialisation of political parties, also considering the
parties' organization features.
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