Cross-national partisan effects on agenda stability

Author (Person) ,
Series Title
Series Details Vol.25, No.4, 2018, p586-605
Publication Date April 2018
ISSN 1350-1763
Content Type

Abstract:

Studies of policy attention find only mixed support for a partisan impact, instead showing that policy attention reacts more to world events. Yet, a rigorous examination of the ways in which change in the partisan composition of government matters for the distribution of policies across issues has yet to be completed in a cross-national framework.

Combining data on policy output from the Comparative Agendas Project, the authors present a detailed investigation of parties’ effects on agenda stability in six advanced industrial democracies over time. The authors consider parties as dynamic organizations by arguing that parties’ organizational characteristics and goals interact with their electoral context to determine their impact on policy attention.

The results show that parties’ influence on the policy agenda depends on economic conditions, the type of government, the government’s seat share, and the number of parties in the governing cabinet, particularly following a major transition in government.

Source Link https://doi.org/10.1080/13501763.2016.1268641
Subject Categories
Countries / Regions