<span>Millions of enfranchised people live in abject poverty in democracies around the world. Yet in representative democracies, the success or failure of political parties rests on their ability to effectively engage voters. In today's highly unequal and individualized societies, the diversity of v
Segmented Representation: Political Party Strategies in Unequal Democracies (Oxford Studies in Democratization)
✍ Scribed by Juan Pablo Luna Farina
- Publisher
- Oxford University Press
- Year
- 2014
- Tongue
- English
- Leaves
- 401
- Edition
- Illustrated
- Category
- Library
No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.
✦ Synopsis
Millions of enfranchised people live in abject poverty in democracies around the world. Yet in representative democracies, the success or failure of political parties rests on their ability to effectively engage voters. In today's highly unequal and individualized societies, the diversity of voters along socioeconomic, religious, and other lines presents an obstacle for parties vying for electoral success. How, then, can widespread, crushing poverty still exist in stable democracies, if every citizen has a vote? Two wildly different parties, Chile's right-wing UDI and Uruguay's left-wing Frente Amplio, have achieved stunning victories in this supposedly inhospitable political landscape. They have done so by simultaneously segmenting and strategically harmonizing their linkages to distinct cross-sections of voters in each society. While that electoral strategy makes for a winning hand for parties in fragmented modern societies, it perpetuates the gross inequalities that characterize the social, political, and economic landscapes of the developing democratic world. This book develops a new analytical and conceptual framework to unveil and explain segmented representation, revealing new implications for democratic societies.
Oxford Studies in Democratization is a series for scholars and students of comparative politics and related disciplines. Volumes concentrate on the comparative study of the democratization process that accompanied the decline and termination of the cold war. The geographical focus of the series is primarily Latin America, the Caribbean, Southern and Eastern Europe, and relevant experiences in Africa and Asia. The series editor is Laurence Whitehead, Official Fellow, Nuffield College, University of Oxford.
✦ Table of Contents
Cover
Series editor: Laurence Whitehead
Copyright
Contents
List of Illustrations
List of Examples
List of Graphs
List of Maps
List of Tables
List of Abbreviations
Prologue
Introduction
Segmented Democratic Representation in Unequal Societies
Why Segmented Representation Matters for Redistribution and for Party System Change
Research Design
Case Selection
Multi-level Research Design: Paired District Comparison
Tools for Observing and Analyzing Different Types of Linkages
Plan of the Book
Part I: Descriptive Inference
1 Segmented Electoral Appeals: A Descriptive Framework
Towards an Adapted Framework2
Types of Party–Voter Linkages: A Minimal Definition
Party–Voter Linkages and the Assumption of Trade-Offs
The Structure of Segmentation
Party–Voter Linkage Types and Strategic Harmonization
Segmentation and Harmonization of Electoral Appeals
Operationalization and Identification Strategy: Mapping Segmented Linkages
Level of Analysis: System or Individual Parties?
Unit of Observation and Units of Analysis
Recovering Historical Patterns of Segmentation and Harmonization (Independence to 1973)
Observing Socioeconomic Segmentation at the Aggregate Level in the Contemporary Period
Observing Territorial and Socioeconomic Segmentation at the District Level
Observing Party Strategies
Observing Structures of Segmentation in Other Cases
Summary of the Operationalization Strategy for Measuring the Dependent Variable
Causes of Party–Voter Linkage Types: Available Arguments
Causes of Different Types of Linkages and Structures of Segmentation
Which Types of Linkages and What Degree of Segmentation Are Observed in the System?
Is Segmentation Mixed or Dual?
Can Parties Strategically Harmonize Segmented Appeals?
Expected Types of Causation and Hypothesized Causal Configurations Across Cases
2 Patterns of Party–Voter Linkages in Chile and Uruguay: A Stylized Description of the Pre-1973 and Post-Transitional Periods
Introduction
The Chilean and Uruguayan Pre-Authoritarian Party Systems
A General Characterization of the Chilean Party System
A General Characterization of the Uruguayan Party System
Applying the Analytical Framework to the Pre-Authoritarian Party Systems
The Historical Configuration of Party–Voter Linkages in Chile and Uruguay
Party–Voter Linkages in Post-Authoritarian Chile and Uruguay, 1990–2010
Post-Transitional Party–Voter Linkages in Chile
Post-Transitional Party–Voter Linkages in Uruguay
Applying the Analytical Framework to Post-Transitional Party Systems
Recent Evolution of the Two-Party Systems
Chile’s Bureaucratic-Authoritarian Regime (1973–1989)
Uruguay: The Bureaucratic-Authoritarian (BA) Regime and Transition to Democracy (1973–1984)
Post-Transitional Party-SystemS and Programmatic Party–Voter Linkages
Chile: 1989–2010
Uruguay: 1984–2010
SUMMING UP: The Contemporary Configuration of Party–voter Linkages in Chile and Uruguay
3 Socioeconomic Segmentation of Party–Voter Linkages in Post-Transitional Chile and Uruguay
Introduction
Methodological Strategy: Programmatic Linkage Proxies
The Evolution and Socioeconomic Segmentation of Programmatic Linkages in Chile (1989–2010) and Uruguay (1984–2010)
Significant Partisan Differences Across Programmatic Divides
Relative Programmatic Placements of Partisan Electorates and Congressional Delegations
Procrustes Analysis: Multidimensional Issue Congruence
Cross-Validation: Interview and Expert Survey Evidence
Alternative Types of Linkages and Their Patterns of Socioeconomic Segmentation
Conclusion
4 Territorial Segmentation of Party–Voter Linkages in Post-Transitional Chile and Uruguay
Introduction and Methodological Strategy
Comparative Notes on Party–Voter Linkages at the Local Level in Chile and Uruguay
Chile: Overall Dynamics of Party–Voter Linkages at the District Level
Linkage Segmentation in Chilean Districts: A Classification of District Types
Upper-Income Sectors: “Rightist Ghettos”
Lower-Income Sectors Without Available Territories: “Leftist Ghettos” and Pinochet’s Successful Mayors in Congress
Middle and Lower-Income Districts with Available Territories: Heterogeneous Societies and Intra-District Segmentation
Uruguay: Overall Dynamics of Party–Voter Linkages at the District Level
Ideological Families and the Recrafting of Local Party Systems: A Tentative Characterization of District Types in Uruguay
Towards National–Local Dealignment? The Characteristics of Recent Political Leaderships at the District Level
The Evolution of Linkage Types at the District Level
The Receding of Clientelism
The Mutation and (Municipal) Refuge of Clientelism and Constituency Service
The Current Nature of Non-Programmatic Linkages in Uruguay: Overarching Implications
5 Strategic Harmonization of Segmented Linkages: The UDI and FA in Comparative Perspective
Introduction
Segmentation and Harmonization Strategies of the UDI and FA
Setting Comparative Parameters: Less Successful Parties and Strategic Harmonization
The UDI IN CHILE
Origins and Social Base
The Core Constituency
The UDI’s Outreach to the Popular Sectors: Authoritarian Clientelism22
The Political Opportunity Structure for Seducing the “Soft Vote”
Political Organization and the UDI’s Partisan Apparatus
The “Popular Party” and Lavin’s National Leadership
Corollary: The UDI’s Harmonized Dual Strategy
The FA in Uruguay
Origins and Social Base
The FA’s Core Constituency
The Political Opportunity Structure of the 1990s and 2000s
Reaching the FA’s Peripheral Constituency
Moderation, Leadership Renewal, and Electoral Alliances56
The Municipal Government of Montevideo
Reaching the FA’s Emerging Constituency: the AU and the MPP
The FA’s Harmonized Mixed Strategy
The UDI and FA in Comparative Perspective
PART II: CAUSAL INFERENCE
6 Causal Induction: Explaining Linkage Structures in Chile and Uruguay
The Variance to Be Explained
The Nature of the Causal Argument: Types of Causation and Coding of Each Case
Explaining the Scope of Socioeconomic Segmentation and Predominant Types of Party–Voter Linkages
Social Inequality
Privatization, Social Policy Provision, and Decentralization
Timing of Market and State Reforms
Authoritarian Legacies and the Politics of the Transition to Democracy
Institutional Factors
Explaining Patterns of Territorial Segmentation
Explaining Types of Strategic Harmonization
District Magnitude
Separation of Municipal and National-Level Elections
Nomination Procedures
Campaign Finance Regulations
Privatization and State Reform
Individual Parties’ Access to Material and Symbolic Resources
Conclusion
7 Plausibility and Scope: Out-of-Sample Tests
Operationalization: Identifying Non-Segmented, Segmented and Harmonized, and Segmented and Non-Harmonized Linkage Strategies
Strategy for Operationalizing Other Variables
Assessing the External Validity of Descriptive Propositions and an Overarching Causal Claim
External Validity of Explanatory Propositions
Scope of Segmentation, Predominant Linkage Types
Strategic Harmonization
Individually Successful Parties in Highly Unequal Societies
The Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP)
The Alianza Republicana Nacional (ARENA)
The Partido dos Trabalhadores (PT)
The Movimiento al Socialismo (MAS)
Comparative Analysis of the Shadow Cases’ Causal Configurations
Conclusion
8 Conclusion
Methodological Implications
Substantive Implications
Linkage Strategies’ Redistributive Impacts
Inter-Temporal Party and Party-System Dynamics, and States’ Bureaucratic Capacity
Theoretical Implications
Bibliography
Name Index
Subject Index
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