Summary
Minority rule is a frequent phenomenon in many parliamentary democracies. In minority governments, political parties in cabinet neither enjoy majority support in the electorate nor in parliament. Minority rule has become more prevalent in a time when party systems in democracies are experiencing drastic changes. Citizens’ voting behavior has become more volatile, new challenger parties – including populist radical right parties – have permanently entered the political landscape, and parliaments have become more fractionalized. The implications of the increasing phenomenon of minority rule for the functioning of democracy and political representation are possibly far-reaching. Unfortunately, existing theoretical and empirical approaches are insufficient to understand the consequences of minority rule for party systems, governmental behavior, and citizens’ responses. MINORITYRULE’s objective is therefore to provide a broad and systematic comparative analysis of the implications of minority rule for political representation. The project investigates how minority rule affects the intensity of political polarization between political parties during parliamentary debates and election campaigns, how it constrains the responsiveness of governments to public opinion at the national and European level, and how citizens evaluate the legitimacy of minority rule. MINORITYRULE will accomplish these tasks on the basis of an unprecedented comparative data collection using novel multilingual text-as-data approaches and cross-national survey experiments. Ultimately, the project will lead to a new theory of political representation under minority rule. In light of changing party systems, MINORITYRULE will generate new insights about the nature of political representation in which governments rule without stable majorities in parliament and society.
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Web resources: | https://cordis.europa.eu/project/id/101002115 |
Start date: | 01-09-2021 |
End date: | 31-08-2026 |
Total budget - Public funding: | 2 000 000,00 Euro - 2 000 000,00 Euro |
Cordis data
Original description
Minority rule is a frequent phenomenon in many parliamentary democracies. In minority governments, political parties in cabinet neither enjoy majority support in the electorate nor in parliament. Minority rule has become more prevalent in a time when party systems in democracies are experiencing drastic changes. Citizens’ voting behavior has become more volatile, new challenger parties – including populist radical right parties – have permanently entered the political landscape, and parliaments have become more fractionalized. The implications of the increasing phenomenon of minority rule for the functioning of democracy and political representation are possibly far-reaching. Unfortunately, existing theoretical and empirical approaches are insufficient to understand the consequences of minority rule for party systems, governmental behavior, and citizens’ responses. MINORITYRULE’s objective is therefore to provide a broad and systematic comparative analysis of the implications of minority rule for political representation. The project investigates how minority rule affects the intensity of political polarization between political parties during parliamentary debates and election campaigns, how it constrains the responsiveness of governments to public opinion at the national and European level, and how citizens evaluate the legitimacy of minority rule. MINORITYRULE will accomplish these tasks on the basis of an unprecedented comparative data collection using novel multilingual text-as-data approaches and cross-national survey experiments. Ultimately, the project will lead to a new theory of political representation under minority rule. In light of changing party systems, MINORITYRULE will generate new insights about the nature of political representation in which governments rule without stable majorities in parliament and society.Status
SIGNEDCall topic
ERC-2020-COGUpdate Date
27-04-2024
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