Party Policy Diffusion

Do parties learn from or emulate parties in other political systems? This research develops the argument that parties are more likely to employ the heuristic of learning from and emulating foreign successful (incumbent) parties. Spatial-econometric analyses of parties’ election policies from several...

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Veröffentlicht in:The American political science review 2016-05, Vol.110 (2), p.397-410
Hauptverfasser: BÖHMELT, TOBIAS, EZROW, LAWRENCE, LEHRER, RONI, WARD, HUGH
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container_title The American political science review
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creator BÖHMELT, TOBIAS
EZROW, LAWRENCE
LEHRER, RONI
WARD, HUGH
description Do parties learn from or emulate parties in other political systems? This research develops the argument that parties are more likely to employ the heuristic of learning from and emulating foreign successful (incumbent) parties. Spatial-econometric analyses of parties’ election policies from several established democracies robustly confirm that political parties respond to left-right policy positions of foreign political parties that have recently governed. By showing that parties respond to these foreign incumbent parties, this work has significant implications for our understanding of party competition. Furthermore, we contribute to the literature on public policy diffusion, as we suggest that political parties are important vehicles through which public policies diffuse.
doi_str_mv 10.1017/S0003055416000162
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source Jstor Complete Legacy; Worldwide Political Science Abstracts; Cambridge University Press Journals Complete
subjects Competition
Economic Factors
Elections
Evidence
Heuristic
Heuristics
Incumbency
Influence
Kahneman, Daniel (1934-2024)
Left wing politics
Maximum Likelihood Statistics
Political parties
Political science
Political systems
Public policy
Tax Rates
Transnationalism
title Party Policy Diffusion
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