Party system classifications have been central in political science, especially until Sartori's influential typology in 1976. However, recent years have seen diminished attention to such classifications. Western European party systems have significantly transformed, particularly over the last 15 years due to multiple crises, affecting their core structure, or what Sartori termed ‘patterns of interparty competition.’ This raises questions about whether these changes have undermined the very concept of systemness, making classifications irrelevant. This research note redefines party systems based on the number and composition of relevant political poles (governing alternatives) and, through a long-term analysis of Western Europe (20 countries since 1945), assesses their degree of systemness. Results indicate that many systems have become ‘non-systems,’ with fluctuating and unstable party poles. Most Western European systems have exhibited this ‘non-system’ type for at least half of legislatures since 1989, thus making classifications only short-lived snapshots and inevitably useless for long-term accounts.
Chiaramonte, A; Emanuele, Vincenzo; Improta, Marco. (9999). Party system types and the decline of systemness in Western Europe: are party system classifications still useful?. ITALIAN POLITICAL SCIENCE REVIEW, (ISSN: 2057-4908), 1-9. Doi: 10.1017/ipo.2025.10057.
Party system types and the decline of systemness in Western Europe: are party system classifications still useful?
Emanuele V
;Improta M
In corso di stampa
Abstract
Party system classifications have been central in political science, especially until Sartori's influential typology in 1976. However, recent years have seen diminished attention to such classifications. Western European party systems have significantly transformed, particularly over the last 15 years due to multiple crises, affecting their core structure, or what Sartori termed ‘patterns of interparty competition.’ This raises questions about whether these changes have undermined the very concept of systemness, making classifications irrelevant. This research note redefines party systems based on the number and composition of relevant political poles (governing alternatives) and, through a long-term analysis of Western Europe (20 countries since 1945), assesses their degree of systemness. Results indicate that many systems have become ‘non-systems,’ with fluctuating and unstable party poles. Most Western European systems have exhibited this ‘non-system’ type for at least half of legislatures since 1989, thus making classifications only short-lived snapshots and inevitably useless for long-term accounts.| File | Dimensione | Formato | |
|---|---|---|---|
|
Chiaramonte, Emanuele, and Improta IPSR 2025.pdf
Open Access
Tipologia:
Versione dell'editore
Licenza:
Creative commons
Dimensione
373.01 kB
Formato
Adobe PDF
|
373.01 kB | Adobe PDF | Visualizza/Apri |
Pubblicazioni consigliate
I documenti in IRIS sono protetti da copyright e tutti i diritti sono riservati, salvo diversa indicazione.



