Is the party over? Parties are the central institutions of representative democracy, but critics increasingly claim that parties are failing to perform their democratic functions.<em> Political Parties and Democratic Linkage </em>assembles unprecedented cross-national evidence to assess how parties
Democratic Dilemmas: Why democracies ban political parties
✍ Scribed by Angela K Bourne
- Publisher
- Routledge
- Year
- 2018
- Tongue
- English
- Leaves
- 281
- Series
- (Routledge Studies in Extremism and Democracy)
- Edition
- 1
- Category
- Library
No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.
✦ Synopsis
This book examines how democratic communities resolve dilemmas posed by anti-system parties or, more specifically, the question of why democracies take the grave decision to ban political parties. On the one hand, party bans may ‘protect’ democracies, usually from groups deemed to undermine the democratic system or its core values, territorial integrity or state security. At the same time, banning parties challenges foundational democratic commitments to political pluralism, tolerance and rights to free speech and association. The book probes the deliberative processes, discursive strategies and power politics employed when democratic communities negotiate this dilemma. It examines discourses of securitization and desecuritization, preferences of veto-players, anti-system party orientations to violence, electoral systems and the cordon sanitaire as alternatives to party bans, and incentives for mainstream parties to cooperate, rather than ban, parties to achieve office and policy goals. It does so with reference to case studies of party bans, legalizations and failed ban cases in Spain (Herri Batasuna and successors), the United Kingdom (Sinn Féin and Republican Clubs) and Germany (Socialist Reich Party and National Democratic Party of Germany).
✦ Table of Contents
Cover
Half Title
Book Title
Copyright
Dedication
Table of Contents
List of figures
List of tables
List of abbreviations
Introduction: pluralism, tolerance and the proscription of political parties
The democratic dilemma of party bans
Defining ‘anti-system parties’ and ‘party bans’
Hypotheses and case selection
Structure of the book and findings
1 Theory and research design: from ‘militant democracy’ to security discourse, institutions and democratic competition
The ‘militant democracy’ paradigm
Hypothesis formation and theory development
Securitization, veto players and political violence
Effectiveness of alternatives to proscription
Democratic competition and government formation
Expected relationships between variables
Note
2 Ban regimes and banned parties in Spain, the United Kingdom and Germany
Party bans in Spain
Party bans in the United Kingdom
Party bans in Germany
3 Herri Batasuna and its successors: from ‘terrorist threat’ to carrier of a ‘Copernican shift’ from violence
Herri Batasuna and successors
Party ban veto players in Spain
Proscription of Herri Batasuna, Euskal Herritarrok and Batasuna
Legalization of Sortu and Bildu
Conclusion
Notes
4 Sinn Féin and Republican Clubs: from terrorist pariah to republicanism’s pathway out of violence
Sinn Féin and Republican Clubs
Ban on Sinn Féin and Republican Clubs in Northern Ireland
Legalization of Republican Clubs and Sinn Féin from Westminster
Conclusion
Notes
5 The Socialist Reich Party and National Democratic Party of Germany: from ‘militant democracy’ to declining anti-system party threats
The Socialist Reich Party and the National Democratic Party
Party-ban-veto-players
The banning of the SRP
Failed attempts to ban the National Democratic Party
Conclusion
Note
6 Electoral systems as an alternative to party bans
Electoral systems and the marginalization of small parties
Electoral systems in Spain
Electoral systems in the United Kingdom
Electoral systems in Germany
Conclusion
7 Party bans and government formation
Party bans, the cordon sanitaire and party-ban-veto-players’ ‘office’ and ‘policy’ goals
Complex coalition politics and varying incentives for collaboration with Herri Batasuna and its successors
The irrelevance of coalition politics for party bans in the United Kingdom and Northern Ireland
Limited incentives for cooperation with the SRP and NPD and effective policy of ‘Ausgrenzung’
Conclusion
Notes
Conclusion
Conditions under which democracies ban political parties
Conditions under which democracies legalize banned parties
Conditions under which party ban attempts fail
Explaining party bans
Appendix 1: main features of electoral systems in Spain, the United Kingdom and Germany
Appendix 2: government formation in Spain, the United Kingdom and Germany
References
Official and archival documents
Cabinet minutes
Party documents
Selected court rulings
Newspaper articles
Books and articles
Index
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