Membership in Party Organizations and the Problem of Decline of Parties
- 1 January 1991
- journal article
- research article
- Published by SAGE Publications in Comparative Political Studies
- Vol. 23 (4) , 459-477
- https://doi.org/10.1177/0010414091023004002
Abstract
This article questions assumptions in the literature dealing with party decline. First, European aggregate membership data do not support a general conclusion of party decline. Second, individual-level data for Norway demonstrate the complexities of the relationship between membership, party identification, activity in parties, and membership stability. Third, we discuss societal changes commonly associated with party decline, such as the rise of corporatism, the new political movements, and the rise of the electronic media. The aurthors argue that these developments change the structural position of parties (external) and the relationship between different levels of the party organization itself (internal). While such developments may lead to party decline, they also give party organizations new political maneuverability. Furthermore, the growth of new parties, the politicization of new arenas, and the nationalization of party apparatuses counteract the factors associated with party decline.Keywords
This publication has 11 references indexed in Scilit:
- Party Decline in the West A Skeptic's ViewJournal of Theoretical Politics, 1989
- Premisser för politiskt massmedlemskap: partierna i Danmark i en nordisk jämförelsePolitica, 1989
- Cultural policy, leisure and voluntary organizations in NorwayLeisure Studies, 1987
- Old and new politics: The Dutch peace movement and the traditional political organizationsEuropean Journal of Political Research, 1987
- Local Political Party Committees, Task Performance and Organizational VitalityThe Western Political Quarterly, 1986
- On the Study of New PartiesInternational Political Science Review, 1985
- The Local Party Organization and Its Members: Between Randomness and Rationality*Scandinavian Political Studies, 1983
- The Distribution of Political Participation in Norway: Alternative Perspectivesona Problem of Democratic Theory*Scandinavian Political Studies, 1982
- THE DYNAMICS OF EUROPEAN PARTY SYSTEMS: CHANGING PATTERNS OF ELECTORAL VOLATILITYEuropean Journal of Political Research, 1979
- Motivation, Incentive Systems, and the Political Party OrganizationAmerican Political Science Review, 1968