Party Origins, Party Infrastructural Strength, and Governance Outcomes

Ruling party strength is often associated with positive outcomes in autocracies, but we know little about how the effects of party strength differ across party types or which feature of party organization contributes most to better outcomes. This article argues that party infrastructural strength –...

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Veröffentlicht in:British journal of political science 2024-07, Vol.54 (3), p.667-692
1. Verfasser: Zeng, Qingjie
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description Ruling party strength is often associated with positive outcomes in autocracies, but we know little about how the effects of party strength differ across party types or which feature of party organization contributes most to better outcomes. This article argues that party infrastructural strength – the ability of grassroots party organizations to penetrate society and mobilize the masses – improves governance outcomes but only for authoritarian parties that rose to power through social movements that overthrew the existing political system. Parties that relied on mass mobilization to gain power tend to continue utilizing party strength to provide public goods and gather support. I provide empirical support for my theory using data covering all autocratic ruling parties during the post-Second World War period. The findings have major implications for understanding the intellectual and political challenges posed by well-organized one-party regimes.
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source Worldwide Political Science Abstracts; Sociological Abstracts; Cambridge University Press Journals Complete
subjects Authoritarianism
Autocracy
Democracy
Economic growth
Governance
Grass roots movement
Mobilization
Organizational structure
Political leadership
Political parties
Political power
Political systems
Post World War II period
Power
Power-sharing
Public goods
Social movements
Social power
World War II
title Party Origins, Party Infrastructural Strength, and Governance Outcomes
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