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Party decline in AmericaParty decline in America

Party decline in America1996

John J. Coleman

About this book

As the influence of political parties diminished in postwar America, scholars argued about whether their decline was caused by transformations in voter behavior, new styles of campaigning, or trust-shattering events such as Vietnam and Watergate. To some of these writers, parties were the relics of a technologically less sophisticated era. Today, however, many experts believe that these institutions have an inevitable tendency to adapt and survive. John Coleman thinks the reality is more complicated than this. In his view neither party decline nor adaptation is inevitable. His state-centered approach shows that the condition of political parties depends critically on the state's major policy concerns and on its institutional policy-making structure.

Details

First published
1996
OL Work ID
OL3242883W

Subjects

Economic policyFinance, PublicHistoryPolitical partiesPolitics and governmentPublic FinancePolitical parties, united statesUnited states, politics and government, 1933-1945United states, politics and government, 1945-1989United states, politics and government, 1989-United states, economic policyFinance, public, united states

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