Life after Dictatorship
Herausgeber: Loxton, James; Mainwaring, Scott
Life after Dictatorship
Herausgeber: Loxton, James; Mainwaring, Scott
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Launches a new research agenda on one of the most common but overlooked features of the democratization experience worldwide: authoritarian successor parties.
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Launches a new research agenda on one of the most common but overlooked features of the democratization experience worldwide: authoritarian successor parties.
Hinweis: Dieser Artikel kann nur an eine deutsche Lieferadresse ausgeliefert werden.
Hinweis: Dieser Artikel kann nur an eine deutsche Lieferadresse ausgeliefert werden.
Produktdetails
- Produktdetails
- Verlag: Cambridge University Press
- Seitenzahl: 434
- Erscheinungstermin: 31. Oktober 2018
- Englisch
- Abmessung: 235mm x 157mm x 28mm
- Gewicht: 776g
- ISBN-13: 9781108426671
- ISBN-10: 1108426670
- Artikelnr.: 51492120
- Verlag: Cambridge University Press
- Seitenzahl: 434
- Erscheinungstermin: 31. Oktober 2018
- Englisch
- Abmessung: 235mm x 157mm x 28mm
- Gewicht: 776g
- ISBN-13: 9781108426671
- ISBN-10: 1108426670
- Artikelnr.: 51492120
Preface James Loxton and Scott Mainwaring; Introduction: authoritarian
successor Parties Worldwide James Loxton; Part I. Why Do Authoritarian
Successor Parties Exist (and Often Wins Elections)?: 1. Linkage strategies
of authoritarian successor parties Herbet Kitschelt and Matthew Singer; 2.
Authoritarian successor parties in South Korea and Taiwan: authoritarian
inheritance, organizational adaptation, and issue management T. J. Cheng
and Teh-fu Huang; 3. Personalistic authoritarian successor parties in Latin
America James Loxton and Steven Levitsky; Part II. What Explains Variation
in Authoritarian Successor Party Performane?: 4. Victims of their own
success: the paradoxical fate of the communist successor parties Anna
Grzymala-Busse; 5. Authoritarian successor parties in Sub-Saharan Africa:
into the wilderness and back again? Rachel Beatty Riedl; 6. The survival of
authoritarian successor parties in Africa: organizational legacies or
competitive landscapes? Adrienne LaBas; 7. The contrasting trajectories of
Brazil's two authoritarian successor parties Timothy J. Power; Part III.
What are the Effects of Authoritarian Successor Parties on Democracy?: 8.
Mexico's PRI: the resilience of an authoritarian successor party and its
consequences for democracy Gustavo A. Flores-Macias; 9. Game for democracy:
authoritarian successor parties in developmental Asia Dan Slater and Joseph
Wong; 10. Reluctant democrats: old regime conservative parties in
democracy's first wave in Europe Daniel Ziblatt; Conclusion: life after
democracy James Loxton.
successor Parties Worldwide James Loxton; Part I. Why Do Authoritarian
Successor Parties Exist (and Often Wins Elections)?: 1. Linkage strategies
of authoritarian successor parties Herbet Kitschelt and Matthew Singer; 2.
Authoritarian successor parties in South Korea and Taiwan: authoritarian
inheritance, organizational adaptation, and issue management T. J. Cheng
and Teh-fu Huang; 3. Personalistic authoritarian successor parties in Latin
America James Loxton and Steven Levitsky; Part II. What Explains Variation
in Authoritarian Successor Party Performane?: 4. Victims of their own
success: the paradoxical fate of the communist successor parties Anna
Grzymala-Busse; 5. Authoritarian successor parties in Sub-Saharan Africa:
into the wilderness and back again? Rachel Beatty Riedl; 6. The survival of
authoritarian successor parties in Africa: organizational legacies or
competitive landscapes? Adrienne LaBas; 7. The contrasting trajectories of
Brazil's two authoritarian successor parties Timothy J. Power; Part III.
What are the Effects of Authoritarian Successor Parties on Democracy?: 8.
Mexico's PRI: the resilience of an authoritarian successor party and its
consequences for democracy Gustavo A. Flores-Macias; 9. Game for democracy:
authoritarian successor parties in developmental Asia Dan Slater and Joseph
Wong; 10. Reluctant democrats: old regime conservative parties in
democracy's first wave in Europe Daniel Ziblatt; Conclusion: life after
democracy James Loxton.
Preface James Loxton and Scott Mainwaring; Introduction: authoritarian
successor Parties Worldwide James Loxton; Part I. Why Do Authoritarian
Successor Parties Exist (and Often Wins Elections)?: 1. Linkage strategies
of authoritarian successor parties Herbet Kitschelt and Matthew Singer; 2.
Authoritarian successor parties in South Korea and Taiwan: authoritarian
inheritance, organizational adaptation, and issue management T. J. Cheng
and Teh-fu Huang; 3. Personalistic authoritarian successor parties in Latin
America James Loxton and Steven Levitsky; Part II. What Explains Variation
in Authoritarian Successor Party Performane?: 4. Victims of their own
success: the paradoxical fate of the communist successor parties Anna
Grzymala-Busse; 5. Authoritarian successor parties in Sub-Saharan Africa:
into the wilderness and back again? Rachel Beatty Riedl; 6. The survival of
authoritarian successor parties in Africa: organizational legacies or
competitive landscapes? Adrienne LaBas; 7. The contrasting trajectories of
Brazil's two authoritarian successor parties Timothy J. Power; Part III.
What are the Effects of Authoritarian Successor Parties on Democracy?: 8.
Mexico's PRI: the resilience of an authoritarian successor party and its
consequences for democracy Gustavo A. Flores-Macias; 9. Game for democracy:
authoritarian successor parties in developmental Asia Dan Slater and Joseph
Wong; 10. Reluctant democrats: old regime conservative parties in
democracy's first wave in Europe Daniel Ziblatt; Conclusion: life after
democracy James Loxton.
successor Parties Worldwide James Loxton; Part I. Why Do Authoritarian
Successor Parties Exist (and Often Wins Elections)?: 1. Linkage strategies
of authoritarian successor parties Herbet Kitschelt and Matthew Singer; 2.
Authoritarian successor parties in South Korea and Taiwan: authoritarian
inheritance, organizational adaptation, and issue management T. J. Cheng
and Teh-fu Huang; 3. Personalistic authoritarian successor parties in Latin
America James Loxton and Steven Levitsky; Part II. What Explains Variation
in Authoritarian Successor Party Performane?: 4. Victims of their own
success: the paradoxical fate of the communist successor parties Anna
Grzymala-Busse; 5. Authoritarian successor parties in Sub-Saharan Africa:
into the wilderness and back again? Rachel Beatty Riedl; 6. The survival of
authoritarian successor parties in Africa: organizational legacies or
competitive landscapes? Adrienne LaBas; 7. The contrasting trajectories of
Brazil's two authoritarian successor parties Timothy J. Power; Part III.
What are the Effects of Authoritarian Successor Parties on Democracy?: 8.
Mexico's PRI: the resilience of an authoritarian successor party and its
consequences for democracy Gustavo A. Flores-Macias; 9. Game for democracy:
authoritarian successor parties in developmental Asia Dan Slater and Joseph
Wong; 10. Reluctant democrats: old regime conservative parties in
democracy's first wave in Europe Daniel Ziblatt; Conclusion: life after
democracy James Loxton.