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OverviewLinking Citizens and Parties addresses familiar questions about political representation: Are parties responsive to their core supporters or to the public in general? Do parties that adopt centrist policy positions benefit in elections? Does proportional representation encourage party extremism? These fundamental questions about democracy are paired with the empirical observation of Western European democracies during the last thirty years. The study highlights the pathways (mainstream and niche) through which citizens' political preferences are expressed by their political parties. It concludes with a positive evaluation of these democracies as their citizens have access to at least one, and possibly both niche and mainstream pathways. Full Product DetailsAuthor: Lawrence Ezrow (Lecturer in European Politics, Department of Government, University of Essex)Publisher: Oxford University Press Imprint: Oxford University Press Dimensions: Width: 16.20cm , Height: 1.90cm , Length: 24.00cm Weight: 0.456kg ISBN: 9780199572526ISBN 10: 0199572526 Pages: 202 Publication Date: 27 May 2010 Audience: General/trade , General Format: Hardback Publisher's Status: Active Availability: To order Stock availability from the supplier is unknown. We will order it for you and ship this item to you once it is received by us. Table of ContentsList of tables and figures Preface and Acknowledgements Part I Introduction Citizen-Party Linkages, Political Institutions, and Types of Party Part II Similarities across Democracies 2: Are Moderate Parties Rewarded in Multiparty Systems? 3: Parties' Policy Programmes and the Dog that Didn't Bark: No Evidence that Proportional Systems Promote Extreme Party Positioning Part III: Effects of Electoral Institutions 4: Electoral Rules, the Number of Parties, and Niche Party Success 5: Proximity and Votes for Mainstream and Niche Parties 6: Mean Voter Representation versus Partisan Constituency Representation: Do Parties Respond to the Mean Voter Position or to their Supporters? Part IV: Conclusion 7: The Effects of Electoral Institutions Appendix References IndexReviewsThis very important book reports state-of-the-art research that bridges the study of institutions, political representation, and parties' election strategies. Lawrence Ezrow employs theoretical arguments and empirical analyses of data from more than a dozen European democracies, to demonstrate that political parties respond in unexpected ways to voters' policy preferences; that party policy positioning exerts unexpected effects on election outcomes; and, that the conventional wisdom on how electoral laws affect parties' policy positioning incentives requires revision. Linking Citizens and Parties is a wide-ranging, theoretically-innovative book that marks a major advance in the study of mass-elite policy linkages in Europe. James Adams, Professor of Political Science, University of California, Davis In political science, the nearest thing to general theorems are the famous Downsian median voter theorem and the chaos theorem of social choice. There is also the Duverger argument that proportional electoral systems give many parties, and first past the post give two, as in the US. We don't, as yet, know if these theorems really show us how politics works. Lawrence Ezrow's new book, Linking Citizens and Parties, is a careful empirical and theoretical analysis of how electoral systems do work in translating voter preferences in political reality. Norman Schofield, Taussig Distinguished Professor of Political Economy, Washington University in St.Louis We have long known that proportional representation schemes generate more political parties than do plurality systems. And we have long suspected that the character of representation in them is different as well. What is new in this provocative book is that Ezrow demonstrates that it is the type of parties, not the number, that matters for representation outcomes. Ezrow argues that niche parties, non-centrist groupings that stand for the views of small but coherent segments of the population, are uniquely the product of proportional systems and they are the reason that quirky minorities, from Communists on the left to nationalists on the right, find voice in proportional systems, but not in plurality systems. James A. Stimson, Professor of Political Science, University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill This very important book reports state-of-the-art research that bridges the study of institutions, political representation, and parties' election strategies. Lawrence Ezrow employs theoretical arguments and empirical analyses of data from more than a dozen European democracies, to demonstrate that political parties respond in unexpected ways to voters' policy preferences; that party policy positioning exerts unexpected effects on election outcomes; and, that the conventional wisdom on how electoral laws affect parties' policy positioning incentives requires revision. Linking Citizens and Parties is a wide-ranging, theoretically-innovative book that marks a major advance in the study of mass-elite policy linkages in Europe. James Adams, Professor of Political Science, University of California, Davis In political science, the nearest thing to general theorems are the famous Downsian median voter theorem and the chaos theorem of social choice. There is also the Duverger argument that proportional electoral systems give many parties, and first past the post give two, as in the US. We don't, as yet, know if these theorems really show us how politics works. Lawrence Ezrow's new book, Linking Citizens and Parties, is a careful empirical and theoretical analysis of how electoral systems do work in translating voter preferences in political reality. Norman Schofield, Taussig Distinguished Professor of Political Economy, Washington University in St.Louis We have long known that proportional representation schemes generate more political parties than do plurality systems. And we have long suspected that the character of representation in them is different as well. What is new in this provocative book is that Ezrow demonstrates that it is the type of parties, not the number, that matters for representation outcomes. Ezrow argues that niche parties, non-centrist groupings that stand for the views of small but coherent segments of the population, are uniquely the product of proportional systems and they are the reason that quirky minorities, from Communists on the left to nationalists on the right, find voice in proportional systems, but not in plurality systems. James A. Stimson, Professor of Political Science, University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill Author InformationLawrence Ezrow is a Lecturer in European Politics in the Department of Government at the University of Essex. His research is on comparative political representation, Western European politics, elections, political parties, voting, party strategies, political institutions, and quantitative methodologies. His articles have appeared in the American Journal of Political Science, British Journal of Political Science, European Journal of Political Research, and Journal of Politics. 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