Parties and Linkages in the Slovak Party System: An Overview

Author:

Učeň Peter1,Gyárfášová Oľga2

Affiliation:

1. former democracy assistance professional. Currently he works as policy analyst and freelance consultant in the area of democracy and development assistance .

2. associate professor and senior researcher at the Institute of European Studies and International Relations , Comenius University in Bratislava .

Abstract

Abstract This study acknowledges Kitschelt’s inspiration by understanding party linkage as a mechanism closely pertaining to the relationships of accountability and responsiveness between political parties and voters. Three key linkages – programmatic, charismatic and clientelistic – are scrutinized. The authors identify the “link-age profiles” of relevant political parties in the history of Slovak party competition and use the results of an experts’ survey (from the DALP project) as a (limited) test of the authors’ expert judgement. The study then reflects on the latest developments in political linkages in a period when anti-establishment and anti-system political parties are gaining strength. The paper concludes that clientelism as a linkage played a significantly smaller role than predicted in the 1990s, while charisma – even though we define it differently from some mainstream approaches – manifested a stronger than expected influence on party competition. Also, combinations of charismatic and programmatic linkages seem to be attractive for a number of relevant Slovak parties. Finally, programmatic competition informed Slovak politics for longer and more successfully than Kitschelt’s model would suggest.

Publisher

Walter de Gruyter GmbH

Subject

Political Science and International Relations,Sociology and Political Science

Reference25 articles.

1. Aldrich John (1995): Why parties? The origin and transformation of party politics in America, University of Chicago Press.

2. APSA (1950): Toward a more responsible two-party system. (A report of the Committee on Political Parties of the American Political Science Association.) Issued as a supplement to the American Political Science Review, September 1950).

3. Dalton, Russell. J. – Farrell, David M. – McAllister, Ian (2011): Political Parties and Democratic Linkage: How Parties Organize Democracy, Oxford University Press.

4. Data. DALP (2008–9). Democratic Accountability and Linkages Project: available at https://duke.qualtrics.com/jfe/form/SV_eLPpbYbmOrnxyOp?Q_JFE=qdg (20 March 2021).

5. Dataset Codebook. DALP. (2008–9). Democratic Accountability and Linkages Project: available at https://sites.duke.edu/democracylinkage/files/2014/12/DALP_Codebook_2014-04_01.pdf (20 March 2021).

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