Parliamentary Politics and the Development of the Green Party in West Germany
- 1 January 1989
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Cambridge University Press (CUP) in The Review of Politics
- Vol. 51 (3) , 386-411
- https://doi.org/10.1017/s0034670500049743
Abstract
This study deals with the experiences of the Greens (Die Griinen) during the 1980's as a “new” party in West German state and federal parliaments and specifically with the Green parliamentary groups' relationships with the movement-party. The founders of the Greens sought to organize as a decentralized, participatory democracy. Accordingly, they developed rules to hinder the emergence of a professionalized leadership and to restrict the autonomy of parliamentary groups. Utilizing a comparative approach, the author investigates the extent to which the Greens have become “parliamentarized” by the normalizing forces of the established system at state and federal levels. This study relates the Greens' developmental experiences to the “classic” observations of Duverger, Michels, and others about modern party development. Finally, it reviews the recent perspectives of various intraparty groups about the future of the Greens.Keywords
This publication has 8 references indexed in Scilit:
- Green Politics and Alternative EconomicsGerman Studies Review, 1988
- Left-Libertarian Parties: Explaining Innovation in Competitive Party SystemsWorld Politics, 1988
- The Role of the Greens in West German Parliamentary Politics, 1980–87The Review of Politics, 1988
- The organization of a participatory party – the German Greens*European Journal of Political Research, 1987
- Formalizing and Testing Duverger's Theories on Political PartiesComparative Political Studies, 1985
- The Green Party in Contemporary West German PoliticsThe Political Quarterly, 1983
- Länderparlamentarismus in der BundesrepublikPublished by Springer Nature ,1979
- Institutionalization of Parliament and Parliamentarization of Parties in ItalyLegislative Studies Quarterly, 1978