Modernization, Cleavages and Voting Behavior in East Europe. An Analysis of Romanian Voting Behavior in Comparative Perspective

Since 1989 many Eastern European transformation states have shown a tendency towards frequent changes of government and witnessed the defeat of ruling parties in elections. Such voting behavior may be traced back to various deficits in the interrelation between parties and voters. One of those defi...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Susanne Pickel
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Expert Projects 2007-12-01
Series:Sociologie Românească
Online Access:https://arsociologie.ro/revistasociologieromaneasca/sr/article/view/690
id doaj-581bf376c6604eee9600791f108521e2
record_format Article
spelling doaj-581bf376c6604eee9600791f108521e22020-11-25T03:25:49ZengExpert ProjectsSociologie Românească1220-53892668-14552007-12-0152Modernization, Cleavages and Voting Behavior in East Europe. An Analysis of Romanian Voting Behavior in Comparative PerspectiveSusanne Pickel0University of Ljubljana Since 1989 many Eastern European transformation states have shown a tendency towards frequent changes of government and witnessed the defeat of ruling parties in elections. Such voting behavior may be traced back to various deficits in the interrelation between parties and voters. One of those deficits will be analyzed in this paper: The respective parties lack a strong link with the population; continuous (structural and functional) relations between parties and voters apparently do not exist. The study of interrelations between political representatives and those represented and the subsequent idea of cleavages have been introduced into the electoral and party studies by Stein Rokkan and Seymour Martin Lipset (1967): Cleavages are societal conflicts that are transferred into political divisions and represented by particular parties (Eith 2001; Schmitt 2001). Rokkan and Lipset describe parties as the main “transmission belt” from group interests to political positions. Parties act on cleavages that stabilize the party system. https://arsociologie.ro/revistasociologieromaneasca/sr/article/view/690
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Susanne Pickel
spellingShingle Susanne Pickel
Modernization, Cleavages and Voting Behavior in East Europe. An Analysis of Romanian Voting Behavior in Comparative Perspective
Sociologie Românească
author_facet Susanne Pickel
author_sort Susanne Pickel
title Modernization, Cleavages and Voting Behavior in East Europe. An Analysis of Romanian Voting Behavior in Comparative Perspective
title_short Modernization, Cleavages and Voting Behavior in East Europe. An Analysis of Romanian Voting Behavior in Comparative Perspective
title_full Modernization, Cleavages and Voting Behavior in East Europe. An Analysis of Romanian Voting Behavior in Comparative Perspective
title_fullStr Modernization, Cleavages and Voting Behavior in East Europe. An Analysis of Romanian Voting Behavior in Comparative Perspective
title_full_unstemmed Modernization, Cleavages and Voting Behavior in East Europe. An Analysis of Romanian Voting Behavior in Comparative Perspective
title_sort modernization, cleavages and voting behavior in east europe. an analysis of romanian voting behavior in comparative perspective
publisher Expert Projects
series Sociologie Românească
issn 1220-5389
2668-1455
publishDate 2007-12-01
description Since 1989 many Eastern European transformation states have shown a tendency towards frequent changes of government and witnessed the defeat of ruling parties in elections. Such voting behavior may be traced back to various deficits in the interrelation between parties and voters. One of those deficits will be analyzed in this paper: The respective parties lack a strong link with the population; continuous (structural and functional) relations between parties and voters apparently do not exist. The study of interrelations between political representatives and those represented and the subsequent idea of cleavages have been introduced into the electoral and party studies by Stein Rokkan and Seymour Martin Lipset (1967): Cleavages are societal conflicts that are transferred into political divisions and represented by particular parties (Eith 2001; Schmitt 2001). Rokkan and Lipset describe parties as the main “transmission belt” from group interests to political positions. Parties act on cleavages that stabilize the party system.
url https://arsociologie.ro/revistasociologieromaneasca/sr/article/view/690
work_keys_str_mv AT susannepickel modernizationcleavagesandvotingbehaviorineasteuropeananalysisofromanianvotingbehaviorincomparativeperspective
_version_ 1724595559695646720