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Inter-Party Mobility among Parliamentary Candidates in Post-Communist East Central EuropeDepartment of Political Science, The Ohio State University, 154 North Oval Mall, Columbus, Ohio 43210, USA shabad.1{at}osu.edu
Department of Sociology, The Ohio State University, 190 North Oval Mall, Columbus, Ohio 43210, USA slomczynski.1{at}osu.edu The development of stable partisan commitments among political elites is crucial for party-system institutionalization in the new democracies of post-communist Europe. Little is known, however, about the partisan behavior of those who compete for national office. This study begins to fill this gap through an analysis of inter-party mobility among all candidates who ran for the lower house of parliament in two pairs of consecutive elections in Poland (19913 and 19937) and in three pairs of consecutive elections in the Czech Republic (19902, 19926 and 19968). We consider the overall extent of inter-party mobility, structural versus voluntary components of mobility, patterns of movement between types of parties and electoral payoffs of stable and shifting partisan affiliations. Although the overall rate of party-switching has declined substantially in the Czech Republic but not in Poland, changes in other characteristics of inter-party mobility indicate that party-system institutionalization is taking place in both countries.
Key Words: elite party-switching party-system institutionalization political mobility
Party Politics, Vol. 10, No. 2,
151-176 (2004) This article has been cited by other articles:
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