Author:
Bolleyer Nicole,Gauja Anika,Correa Patricia
Abstract
Although democratic states increasingly regulate political parties, we know little about how legal environments shape parties' internal lives. This article conceptualizes and measures the "juridification" of party organizations' conflict regulation regimes: that is, the extent to which
parties replicate external legal standards (e.g. norms of due process) within their own procedures. Formulating hypotheses on juridification within different parties and legal environments, we examine intra-party juridification across four democracies with most different party law provisions.
While party juridification varies—reflecting parties' ideological differences—in contexts where organizational governance remains unregulated, once intra-organizational governance is subject to statutory constraints, parties emulate legal norms embedded in the state legal system,
transcending what is legally required, which has important repercussions for how the law shapes civil society organizations generally.
Publisher
Comparative Politics CUNY
Subject
Sociology and Political Science
Cited by
3 articles.
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