Party elites in divided societies

political parties in consociational democracy

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Kurt Richard Luther, Kris Deschouwer: Party elites in divided societies (1999, Routledge)

291 pages

English language

Published Nov. 13, 1999 by Routledge.

ISBN:
978-0-415-20127-8
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5 stars (1 review)

4 editions

reviewed Party elites in divided societies by Kurt Richard Luther (Routledge/ECPR studies in European political science -- 11)

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5 stars

A tour des forces study of consociational democracy

This is quite a comprehensive comparative study of those countries acclaimed to be practising consociational democracies. The prose is highly academic (in tradition of Routledge), and is not recommended for those without a sound understanding of the consociational model. For this, Lijphart’s Democracy in Plural Societies (1977) is a genuine starting point.

Party Elites is a strong book. The theoretical framework and case studies are solid. My study topic is Northern Ireland politics, and the chapters on Belgium and Israel particularly interest me. Deschouwer makes an important point that the development of working federalism is no mean feat. ‘Classic consociationalism’ argues for federal structures, but achieving them can be quite a challenge with the claims of segmental autonomy. I argue that ‘classic consociationalism’ is more consistent with confederalism, and federalism is more representative of what is termed ‘integrative power-sharing’, as defined …

Subjects

  • Political parties
  • Political leadership
  • Democracy
  • Pluralism (Social sciences)
  • Comparative government