political behaviour Flashcards

1
Q

what are supply factors?

A

focus on preferences/institutions (e.g political parties, electoral systems, policies, media)

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2
Q

what are demand factors?

A

focus on people/behaviour (e.g voting, choice, values, identities)

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3
Q

what are political parties?

A

parties are the key mobilising device, parties are collection of interests and ideologies that hope to influence

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4
Q

what are the function of parties as an electoral actor?

A

contesting elections at multiple democratic levels, they provide candidates for election develop programme manifesto

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5
Q

what are the function of parties as coordinators of political action?

A

within government, the formation of government, formation of groups within parliament, actors in the legislature and holding roles at different levels of govt,
in society, organise political activity, focus for campaigning, provide links between public office and civil society

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6
Q

what is the function of parties as providers of representation?

A

recruit candidates for public office, speak for members and supporters of political sphere, represent clusters of political interest and promote those interests

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7
Q

what is descriptive representation?

A

representative drawn from the group that they are representing

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8
Q

what is substantive representation?

A

representative acting on behalf of a group

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9
Q

what is a cadre party?

A

started around mid 19th c. was made up of political elites within parliament and had very minimal structure based on elite networks. membership was elites and funded by personal wealth.
example of this style is whigs and Tory parties

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10
Q

what is a Mass party?

A

started around mid 19th c. was made up of extra parliamentary organisations aiming for representation of social groups.
membership was large unified membership and resources stemmed from fees from members
examples: Labour Party early 20th c.

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11
Q

what is a Catch all party?

A

started around 1950/60, was made up of more professional organisation, members organised into branches and decisions made by elites and advisors.
membership is large and diverse but largely powerless, resources come from contributions and interest groups
examples: Labour Party from 1990s and conservatives 1950s-1998

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12
Q

what is a cartel party?

A

started around 1980s- present day. organisation evolved form Catch all and further marginalised the role of members and increasing the role of unelected party operatives, members replaced by professionals and decisions ratified by members to appear democratic
examples: most European parties have aspects of this

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13
Q

what is a business firm party?

A

started around 1990s, organisation from extra parliamentary initiative of political entrepreneurs, the structure is minimal form of organisation with hierarchal structure. party run as a business, membership is minimal to non existence, resources come from corporate resources
examples: Brexit party, Forza Italia

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14
Q

how can political parties be said to be in decline?

A
  1. parties increasingly centralised and rely less on members,
  2. parties reach out to more people on social media rather than door to door
  3. voters begin to feel weaker attachment to parties, voters feel less identification
  4. rise in challenger parties, decline in core vote
  5. membership of parties in long term decline
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15
Q

what are party systems?

A

a set of political parties within a demographic that compete and cooperate with the aim of increasing their power and controlling the government

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16
Q

what is formal participation?

A

participation In formal and electoral processes (voting, membership, pressure groups, standing as candidate)

17
Q

what is informal participation?

A

participation that exists outside of formal state and electoral political institutions (protest, single issue campaign, direct action, social media)

18
Q

what is the ‘party is over thesis’?

A

parties no longer mass membership organisation, party membership been in long term decline, parties no longer have monopoly on political activity, other actors exist, but parties remain main way in which politics understood

19
Q

how has turnout decline effected participation?

A

election levels declined over time in most democratic countries, as turnout declined inequalities in turnout have increased, voters more likely to be older and wealthier

20
Q

how has party membership decline effected participation?

A

parties have ceased to be embedded within social groups they represent and have become narrow communities of those politically interested. the electorate has become more diverse but parties haven’t

21
Q

how has the rise of informal participation affected participation?

A

the rise of single issue campaign groups, social media makes organisation of informal participation much cheaper and easier, and easier access to engagement

22
Q

what are some explanations for the rise in informal participation?

A

rise in post materialism and emergence of anti-politics.
dealignment/re-alignment, new political organisations, globalisation of politics

23
Q

what is critical citizens theory?

A

theory of political change based on both social and attitudinal change in liberal democracies, increased levels of education plus cheaper and extensive access to information makes govt easier to judge on performance

24
Q

what is social capital theory?

A

since 1950s western societies have become more atomised and individualised, people doing more activities alone rather than in organisations, less party oriented politics

25
Q

what is post materialism?

A

societies have experienced a shift from values of collective to individual, post 1945 western societies experienced increase in material wealth and security, people brought up in post scarcity era

26
Q

why has there been rise in anti-politics?

A

trust in politics and politicians has suffered long term decline, parties have narrowed the scope of political debate and takes some issues beyond politics, decline in support for traditional institutions

27
Q

how has globalisation of politics affected participation?

A

politics now takes place beyond national scale, formal institutions and participation remains rooted at national level.
politicians often claim they cannot influence because of globalisation