Political Parties and Democracy. Spring Prof. Mark Schneider.

Similar documents
PSC 558: Comparative Parties and Elections Spring 2010 Mondays 2-4:40pm Harkness 329

Political Clientelism and the Quality of Public Policy

GS Comparative Politics (Core) Department of Politics New York University -- Fall 2005

Northwestern University Department of Political Science Political Science 353: Latin American Politics Spring Quarter 2012

PSCI 370: Comparative Representation and Accountability Spring 2011 Zeynep Somer-Topcu Office: 301A Calhoun Hall

Introduction to Comparative Politics

American Political Parties Political Science 8219 Spring Monroe Office hours: Wed 2-4 pm

Who Speaks for the Poor? The Implications of Electoral Geography for the Political Representation of Low-Income Citizens

COLGATE UNIVERSITY. POSC 153A: INTRODUCTION TO COMPARATIVE POLITICS (Spring 2017)

Challenges for Developing Democracies

POL 339-D100: Nationalism and Ethnic Conflict Selected Topics in Comparative Politics

Comparative Politics of Latin America Block 6,

Comparative Political Systems (GOVT_ 040) July 6 th -Aug. 7 th, 2015

G : Comparative Political Behavior

Field Seminar in Comparative Politics Boston University Political Science 751 Spring 2017

Political Science 261/261W Latin American Politics Wednesday 2:00-4:40 Harkness Hall 210

Politics of Latin America Political Science 333 Latin American Studies 333 Spring 2017 Syracuse University

POLI 129: How to Steal an Election: Room: Solis 111 Times: Tuesday and Thursday 11-1:50

PSC/IR 262, 260W: Elections in Developing Countries

Comparative Elections (CPO 4072) Spring 2017

American Political Parties Political Science 219 Spring 2009

CONTACT Department of Government 211, Silsby Hall HB 6108 Hanover, New Hampshire 03755

Challenges for Developing Democracies Political Studies 115. Fall 2017

DO BROKERS KNOW THEIR VOTERS? A Test of Guessability in India

POLS. 349 Problems of Democracy and Democratization

Measuring Vote-Selling: Field Evidence from the Philippines

Challenges for Developing Democracies Political Studies 115. Fall 2018

COMPARATIVE POLITICS

AmericasBarometer Insights: 2015 Number 122

POL SCI Party Politics in America. Fall 2018 Online Course

CPO 4303-Politics of South America Fall 2016 MARC 125 Tuesday and Thursday p.m.

Does Clientelism Work: A Test of Guessability in India

Political Representation POLS 251 Spring 2015

UCLA DEPARTMENT OF POLITICAL SCIENCE POLITICAL SCIENCE 151A: GOVERNMENT AND POLITICS OF AFRICA

University of Sheffield, Department of Politics Lecturer, 2011 to date

POLITICAL SCIENCE 260B. Proseminar in American Political Institutions Spring 2003

Democratization and the Emergence of Responsive Party Systems in Latin America

GOV 390L / LAS 384L Political Parties and Party Systems (Spring 2011)

The Formation of National Party Systems Does it happen with age? Brandon Amash

POSC 4411: Politics, Economics, and Democracy Spring, 2016

Title of workshop The causes of populism: Cross-regional and cross-disciplinary approaches

AmericasBarometer Insights: 2012 Number 71

POLS 303: Democracy and Democratization

Politics and Policy in Latin America

University of Notre Dame Department of Political Science Comprehensive Examination in Comparative Politics September 2013

Political Science 3316F: Political Parties Fall 2012

PSOC002 Democracy Term 1, Prof. Riccardo Pelizzo Raffles 3-19 Tel

Roussias CV 1. University of Sheffield, Department of Politics Lecturer, 2011 to date

Political Science. Federal State Autonomous Educational Institution of Higher Education National Research University "Higher School of Economics"

Does Clientelism Work? A Test of Guessability in India

Professor Wendy Hunter Batts 3.138, , Office Hours: Tuesdays and Thursdays 11:00 12:30, and by appointment

COMPARATIVE POLITICAL INSTITUTIONS Political Science 7972

sobek.colorado.edu/~boulding/ Department of Political Science Campus Box 333 University of Colorado Boulder, CO 80309

Radical Right and Partisan Competition

Modern Political Science

Does Clientelism Work? A Test of Guessability in India

Iv. Javakhishvili Tbilisi State University. Fall Comparative Party politics and Party Systems

Instructor: Dr. Hanna Kleider Office: Candler Hall 304 Office hours: Thursday 10:45 12:45

Prof. David Canon Fall Semester Wednesday, 1:20-3:15, 422 North Hall and by appointment

Dr. Melody Ellis Valdini Fall MWF: 12:45-1:50 Office: 650-M URBN Room: Neuberger Hall 59

SOSC The World of Politics

Syllabus: International Political Economy (MGMT 298D) Topics in Political Economy: Voters, Special Interest Groups and Politicians

Voting and Elections Preliminary Syllabus

POL 230/WWS 325 Introduction to Comparative Politics Spring 2018

AmericasBarometer Insights: 2010 Number 51

Lahore University of Management Sciences. POL 320 Comparative Politics Fall

Study Abroad Programme

Political Science Congress: Representation, Roll-Call Voting, and Elections. Fall :00 11:50 M 212 Scott Hall

Party Aggregation and Political Consolidation in. the American States

Comparative Electoral Politics Spring 2008 Professor Orit Kedar Tuesday, Thursday, 3-4:30 Room E51-061

Western European Politics

POLITICAL SCIENCE 200A MAJOR THEMES IN COMPARATIVE ANALYSIS. University of California, Berkeley Fall 2015 M 2-4, 791 Barrows Hall

POLS G9208 Legislatures in Historical and Comparative Perspective

Cecilia Martinez-Gallardo August Education

Employment Associate Professor, University of Kentucky. Assistant Professor, University of Kentucky

Employment Assistant Professor, University of Kentucky. Education Ph.D. Political Science, University of California, San Diego 2006

Contemporary African Politics Political Science 246, Fall 2009 Tuesdays: pm

Dr. Melody Ellis Valdini Spring Tuesday: 4-6:30 Office: 650-M URBN Room: CLY 101

What Makes Everyday Clientelism? Modernization, Institutions, and Values.

SOSC 5170 Qualitative Research Methodology

COMPARATIVE POLITICS

PS489: Federalizing Europe? Structure and Behavior in Contemporary European Politics

GOVT-452: Third World Politics Professor Daniel Brumberg

Power and Politics in America POL-UA 300 Spring 2017 Professor Christopher Dawes

Regime typologies and the Russian political system

POL-GA Comparative Government and Institutions New York University Spring 2017

Topics in Federalism and Decentralization Professor Julia Payson (POL-GA 3300)

Third World Politics Professor Daniel Brumberg

Society & Politics in Contemporary Spain

Prof. Kenneth Mayer II, Monday, 10:00AM-12:00PM Office Hours: just about anytime 1 CLASSICS IN AMERICAN POLITICS

Boundary Control Subnational Authoritarianism in Federal Democracies

CONTEXTUAL VARIABLES AND FINANCING OF POLITICAL PARTIES IN GHANA

University of International Business and Economics International Summer Sessions. PSC 130: Introduction to Comparative Politics

POS 4931 Politics and the Armed Forces

COMPARATIVE POLITICS

17.50: Introduction to Comparative Politics Thursday and Friday, 9:30 a.m. to 11:00 a.m. Building 2, Room 142

Liberté, Egalité, Fraternité!

Rebecca Weitz-Shapiro

Political Science 351 Political Economy of Development Fall 2014

COURSE SYLLABUS PSC 761: AMERICAN POLITICAL FRONTIERS

Transcription:

Political Parties and Democracy Spring 2017 Prof. Mark Schneider Mark_schneider@pitzer.edu To understand the functioning of democracies, it is essential to understand the nature of political parties and electoral behavior. Parties are central to fundamental political processes ranging from representing societal interests, providing political alternatives, mobilizing voters, and channeling conflict. Parties are also often the core institutions that connect voters to the state and often powerfully shape voters attitudes about government. Political behavior, the study of voters attitudes and behaviors surrounding elections, is similarly important for understanding how democracies function. Questions from why voters turn out to vote to why they vote against the incumbent government are important for making sense of the dizzying array of election results we ve seen in recent years. This course introduces students to the study of parties and electoral behavior with an emphasis on party functioning in developing democracies. We will often explore influential readings that apply to developed countries (the U.S., Europe) alongside studies of parties in developing democracies where institutional contexts are quite different. We will cover topics such as voter turnout, partisanship, electoral volatility, party organization, and consider of variety of types of parties. We will also explore the functioning of elections and why this is important for democratic quality and the nature of electoral competition. COURSE REQUIREMENTS Your final grade will be based on the following components: 20% - Class Participation. Attendance is obligatory. An active role in discussions by everyone enrolled in the course is expected, as is the completion of the required readings before the session for which they are assigned. Each student is permitted one unexcused absence (i.e. without a written note from a doctor or a dean). If you miss any class, you will write a three-page make-up response paper that critiques that session s readings. 20% - Country/Region Case Study Presentations I will ask each student to complete one presentation on a country (or party within a country) as it applies to the course theme of that particular session. The presentation should last about 10 minutes. The goal of the presentation is to get you to think about the theoretical arguments addressed in a class session and to apply this to a country (or party) case. All presentations should address theoretical arguments including course readings and additional readings relevant to your case and apply that theory through a case study that includes a presentation of evidence. 10% - Response Papers You will write one 4-5-page (double spaced) response paper. In the response paper, you will be asked to critically engage required readings from a week of class.

The response paper should not be a summary of readings. Instead, you may contrast conceptual and methodological approaches across readings or identify issues left unanswered by the readings. 50% - Final Paper For the final paper you will be asked to write a longer (approximately 20 pages) substantive research paper. Your paper could develop an analysis of a single party or you could develop an analysis of multiple parties/party systems. Regardless of your topic, each student should clear their topic by me no later than the 8 th class session. Readings This course requires you to carefully read all assigned readings before class. Generally, 4 articles or book excerpts are assigned for each class meeting. Make sure that you not only understand the basic argument, but give yourself time to think critically about the readings before class. I also encourage you to complete the reading worksheet linked below for each reading. Books for Purchase: Chandra, Kanchan. 2004. Why Ethnic Parties Succeed: Patronage and Ethnic Head Counts in India. New York: Cambridge University Press. Kalyvas, Stathis. 1996. The Rise of Christian Democracy in Europe. Ithaca: Cornell University Press. Session 1: Course Introduction: Course Schedule and Readings Session 2: What are political parties and are they essential to democracy? Lipset, Seymour. 2000. The Indispensability of Political Parties. Journal of Democracy, 11(1) 48-55. Randall, V. and L. Svsand. 2002. Political Parties and Democratic Consolidation in Africa. Democratization, 9(3) 30-52. Session 3: Elections in Non-Democracies I Part 1: The Conduct of Elections Levitsky, Steven and Luciane Way. 2002. The rise of competitive authoritarianism. Journal of democracy, 13(2) 51-65. Lehoucq, Fabrice. 2003. Electoral Fraud: Causes, Types, and Consequences. Annual Review of Political Science, 6: 233-56.

Session 4: Elections in Non-Democracies II Frye, Timothy, Reuter, O. J., and David Szakonyi. 2014. Political Machines at Work: Voter mobilization and electoral subversion in the workplace. World Politics, 66(2), 195-228. TBA Short Reading on Russian Elections Session 5: What Makes Elections Free and Fair: The Logistical Challenge Schmitter, Phillip and Terry Lynn Karl. 1991. What democracy is... and is not. Journal of democracy, 2(3) 75-88. Sridharan, E. and Milan Vaishnav. Election Commission of India. Presented at the Conference on Building an Indian State in the 21 st Century. Van Ham, C. and Stephan Lindberg. 2015. From Sticks to Carrots: Electoral Manipulation in Africa, 1986 2012. Government and Opposition, 50(03), 521-548. Optional: Hasen, Richard. 2012. Voting Wars: From Florida 2000 to the Next Election Meltdown. In The Voting Wars: From Florida 2000 to the Next Election Meltdown. Yale University Press. Session 6: Campaign Finance in Comparative Perspective: How it Works Ansolabehere, Stephen. 2007. The scope of corruption: lessons from comparative campaign finance disclosure. Election Law Journal, 6(2), 163-183. Eswaran Sridharan and Milan Vaishnav. Forthcoming. India. In Understanding Political Finance. Oxford University Press. Cases: India, U.S. Session 7: Campaign Finance in Comparative Perspective: Consequences for Democracy Vaishnav, Milan. When Crime Pays, Chapter 1. Bartels, Larry. 2016. Unequal Democracy: The Political Economy of the New Gilded Age. Introduction. Part II: Parties, Party Systems, and Theory Session 8: What Do Parties Do? Interest Aggregation and Collective Action Stokes, Susan. 1999. Political Parties and Democracy. Annual Review of Political Science, 2 (1) 243-267. Gunther, Richard and Larry Diamond. 2001. Types and Functions of Parties in Larry Diamond

and Richard Gunther (eds.) Political Parties and Democracy. Baltimore: Johns Hopkins University Press: 3-39. Aldrich, John. 1995. Why Parties: The Origin and Transformation of Party Politics in America. Chicago: University of Chicago Press: Chapter 3. Session 9: When Cleavages Shape Party Systems Lipset, Seymour and Stein Rokkan. 1990. Cleavage Structures, Party Systems, and Voter Alignments: An Introduction. In Peter Mair (ed) The West European Party System. Oxford: Oxford University Press: 91-138. Cox, Gary. 1997. Making Votes Count. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press: Chapter 11. Session 10: When Parties Mobilize New Cleavages Posner, Daniel N. 2004. The Political Salience of Cultural Difference: Why Chewas and Tumbukas Are Allies in Zambia and Adversaries in Malawi. American Political Science Review. 98(4) 529-545. Chhibber, Pradeep and Mariano Torcal. 1997. Elite Strategy, Social Cleavages, and Party Systems in a New Democracy: Spain. Comparative Political Studies, vol. 30(1) 27-54. Session 11: Party System Institutionalization In this class session, we discuss the concept of party system institutionalization and consider cases that provide variation on this concept. Mainwaring, Scott and Timothy Scully, eds. 1995. Building Democratic Institutions: Party Systems in Latin America: Introduction. Hicken, Allen and Erik Martinez Kuhonta. 2011 Shadows From the Past: Party System Institutionalization in Asia. Comparative Political Studies, 44 (5) 572 597. Mainwaring, Scott and Edurne Zoco. 2007. Political Sequences and the Stabilization of Interparty Competition: Electoral Volatility in Old and New Democracies. Party Politics, vol. 13 (2) 155-178. Session 12: The Problem of Weakly Institutionalized Parties Wilkinson, Steven. 2015. Where s the Party? The Decline of Party Institutionalization and What (if Anything) that Means for Democracy. Government and Opposition, 50(03), 420-445. Desposato, Scott. 2006. "Parties for Rent? Careerism, Ideology, and Party Switching in Brazil's Chamber of Deputies." American Journal of Political Science, 50 (1) 62 80. Session 13: Party-Voter Linkages: Partisanship in Comparative Perspective

In this class session, we discuss mainstream theory of partisanship and discuss partisan dynamics in Russia and Latin America. Campbell, Angus, Philip E. Converse, Warren E. Miller, and Donald E. Stokes. 1960. The American Voter. New York: Wiley Press: Chapters 1 and 2. Brader, Ted and Josh Tucker. 2001. The Emergence of Mass Partisanship in Russia: 1993-1996. American Journal of Political Science, 45 (1) 69-83. Samuels, David. 2006. Sources of Mass Partisanship in Brazil. Latin American Politics and Society, 48 (2) 1 27. Recommended: Ishiyama, John, and Krystal Fox. 2006. What Affects the Strength of Partisan Identity in Sub-Saharan Africa. Politics and Policy, 34 (4) 748 73. Session 14: Looking Under the Hood: Party Organization In this class session, we look under the hood of party organizations and party machines engaged in voter mobilization. Duverger, Maurice. 1954. Political Parties (New York: Whiley Publishers) 17-27; 62-71. Levitsky, Steven. 2003. From Labor Politics to Machine Politics: The Transformation of Party- Union Linkages in Argentine Peronism. 1983-1999. Latin American Research Review, 38(3) 3-36. Thachil, Tariq. 2011. Embedded Mobilization: Non-State Service Provision as Electoral Strategy in India. World Politics, 63(3) 434-469. Session 15: Clientelism Part III: Party Linkage Strategies and Political Behavior Kitschelt, Herbert and Steven Wilkinson. 2007. Citizen-Politician Linkages: An Introduction in Herbert Kitschelt and Steven Wilkinson (eds), Patrons, Clients, and Policies. New York: Cambridge University Press: 1-46. Schaffer, Frederic and Andres Schedler. 2007. What is Vote Buying? In Schaffer, Frederic, ed. Elections for Sale: The Causes and Consequences of Vote Buying. Boulder, CO: Lynne Riener Press: Chapter 2. Session 16: Clientelism on the Ground: Latin America Auyero, Javier. 2000. The Logic of Clientelism in Argentina: An Ethnographic Account. Latin American Research Review, 35(3) 55-82. Van de Walle, N. (2007). Meet the new boss, same as the old boss? The evolution of political clientelism in Africa. Patrons, clients and policies: Patterns of democratic accountability and political competition, 50-67.

Recommended: Calvo, Ernesto, and Maria Victoria Murillo. 2013. "When Parties Meet Voters: Assessing Political Linkages Through Partisan Networks and Distributive Expectations in Argentina and Chile." Comparative Political Studies, 46(7) 851-882. Session 17: Ethnic Parties Chandra, Kanchan. Why Ethnic Parties Succeed: Patronage and Ethnic Head Counts in India. New York: Cambridge University Press, 2004, Selected chapters. Session 18: Religious Parties Kalyvas, Stathis. The Rise of Christian Democracy in Europe. Ithaca: Cornell University Press, 1996. Emphasis on Introduction, Chaps. 1-2 and 5. El-Ghobashy, Mona. 2005. The Metamorphosis of the Egyptian Muslim Brothers. International Journal of Middle East Studies, 37(3) 373-395. Session 19: Populist Parties In this session, we will discuss the concept of populism and populist political parties. Barr, Robert. 2009. Populists, Outsiders, and Anti-Establishment Politics. Party Politics, 15 (1) 29-48. Roberts, Kenneth. 2006. Populism, Political Conflict, and Grassroots Organization in Latin America. Comparative Politics, 38(2) 127-48. Hawkins, Kirk. 2003. Populism in Venezuela: The Rise of Chavismo. Third World Quarterly, 24(6) 1137 1160. Session 20: Workshop on Student Papers In this class session, we will break into groups according to topic and discuss paper proposals or drafts. Session 21: Political Behavior in Comparative Perspective: Turnout In this class session, we discuss theory on voter turnout and economic voting. We engage this theory with research from India and Africa. Aldrich, John H. 1993. "Rational Choice and Turnout." American Journal of Political Science, 37(1) 246-78. Banerjee, Mukhelika. 2014. Why India Votes. Chapters 1, 5. Session 22: Why do people vote the way they do? Understanding Retrospective Voting Chhibber, Pradeep and Irfan Nooruddin. 2008. Unstable Politics: Fiscal Space and Electoral

Volatility in the Indian States. Comparative Political Studies, vol. 41 (8) 1069-1091. Posner, Daniel and David Simon. 2002. Economic Conditions and Incumbent Support in Africa's New Democracies: Evidence from Zambia. Comparative Political Studies, vol. 35 (3) 313-336. Session 23: Strategic Voting in Comparative Perspective Readings TBA Session 24: Parties, Party Systems, and Distribution In this final class session, we review the key arguments of the class. We also discuss the implications of party systems and competition on distributive strategies. Chhibber, Pradeep and Irfan Nooruddin. 2004. Do Party Systems Count? The Number of Parties and Government Performance in the Indian States. Comparative Political Studies, vol. 37(2) 152-187. Gilens, Marty. Inequality and Democratic Responsiveness. Public Opinion Quarterly, vol. 69 (5) 778-796. Session 25: Course Conclusion Final Paper Due at the beginning of class.