
Contents
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2.1. Introduction 2.1. Introduction
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2.2. Welfare Democracy and Party Competition 2.2. Welfare Democracy and Party Competition
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2.2.1. Welfare Democracies in Western Europe: Three or Four? 2.2.1. Welfare Democracies in Western Europe: Three or Four?
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2.2.2. Welfare Democracies and Political Dimensionality 2.2.2. Welfare Democracies and Political Dimensionality
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2.2.3. Welfare Democracies and Issue Entrepreneurial Strategies 2.2.3. Welfare Democracies and Issue Entrepreneurial Strategies
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2.3. Assessing Dimensional Association 2.3. Assessing Dimensional Association
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2.4. Party Strategies and Political Outcomes Across Welfare Democracies 2.4. Party Strategies and Political Outcomes Across Welfare Democracies
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2.5. Individual Determinants of Vote Choice 2.5. Individual Determinants of Vote Choice
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2.6. Radical Parties in Europe 2.6. Radical Parties in Europe
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2.6.1. Northern Radicalism 2.6.1. Northern Radicalism
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2.6.2. Southern Radicalism 2.6.2. Southern Radicalism
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2.6.3. Continental Radicalism 2.6.3. Continental Radicalism
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2.7. Conclusion 2.7. Conclusion
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Appendix Appendix
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Notes Notes
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References References
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2 Welfare Democracies and Multidimensional Party Competition in Europe
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Published:April 2018
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Abstract
This chapter explains the relationship between the four European worlds of welfare democracies (Nordic, continental, southern, and Anglo-Saxon) and multidimensional party competition. It systematically examines the variation of the relationship between party positions and salience on economic and cultural politics. The expectation is that southern political economies facilitate closer association between economic and cultural issues, whereas Nordic welfare states produce party systems where competition between mainstream parties is defined by economic politics. The continental political economies stand between the two extremes. The argument is tested with the most recent (2014) waves of data from the Chapel Hill Expert Survey and the European Elections Studies. The analysis suggests different political opportunity structures, and consequently different behavior of radical challenger parties of western Europe. Here, the diverse political economies again correlate with the flavors of radicalism.
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