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Full Description
In recent decades, Bolivia, Colombia, Italy, and Venezuela have all faced the turmoil and democratic crisis of party system collapse. In Bankrupt Representation and Party System Collapse, Jana Morgan analyzes the causes of such collapse. She does so through a detailed examination of Venezuela's traumatic party system decay as well as comparative analysis of seven other countries. Collapse occurs when the party system as a whole is unable to provide adequate linkage between society and the state, failing to furnish programmatic representation, integration of major societal interests, or clientelist exchanges. Linkage decays when party systems face challenges that jeopardize their core strategies at the same time that they are constrained in their ability to adapt and to confront these threats. If this decay is unchecked and linkage of all sorts fails, then the bankrupt party system collapses.
Contents
Contents
List of Figures and Tables
Acknowledgments
List of Abbreviations
Part 1 Understanding Party System Collapse: Concepts and Theory
1 Introduction: The Catastrophe of Collapse
2 What It Looks Like: System Change, Transformation, and Collapse
3 Theorizing Collapse: Challenges, Constraints, and Decaying Linkage
Part 2 Linkage Failure and Venezuelan Collapse
4 The Party System at Its Peak
5 Policy Unresponsiveness and Ideological Convergence
6 Social Transformation and Failing Group Incorporation
7 Resource Shortages and Clientelist Excesses
8 Linkage Failure and Mass Exodus from the Party System
Part 3 Party System Collapse and Survival in Comparative Perspective
9 A Comparative Approach to Analyzing Party System Collapse
10 Bankrupt Representation in Italy, Colombia, and Bolivia
11 Survival Tactics in Argentina, Belgium, Uruguay, and India
12 Insights into Collapse and Its Consequences
Appendixes
References
Index



