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Published online by Cambridge University Press:  aN Invalid Date NaN

Silja Häusermann
Affiliation:
Universität Zürich
Herbert Kitschelt
Affiliation:
Duke University, North Carolina

Summary

Type
Chapter
Information
Beyond Social Democracy
The Transformation of the Left in Emerging Knowledge Societies
, pp. ix - xiii
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Print publication year: 2024
Creative Commons
Creative Common License - CCCreative Common License - BYCreative Common License - NC
This content is Open Access and distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution licence CC-BY-NC 4.0 https://creativecommons.org/cclicenses/

Figures

  1. 1.1Average vote shares of left parties in national elections in Europe, 1960–2020

  2. 1.2Average vote shares of left parties in national elections in Europe, by region, 1960–2020

  3. 1.3Causal temporalities in the trajectory of social democratic parties

  4. 1.4Structural occupational change in labor markets

  5. 1.5Ideal-typical programmatic strategies in the political space

  6. 1.6Programmatic positions of European parties on the economic and GAL-TAN dimensions

  7. 1.7Programmatic positions of European parties on the economic and immigration dimensions

  8. 1.8Development of the occupational knowledge economy: service sector employees with tertiary education as a share of total service sector employment

  9. 1.9Total expenditures on consumption and investment and weight of spending on investment in total expenditure

  10. 1.10Development of electoral shares in national elections for different party families over time, by regions (Continental, Nordic, Southern, and Anglo-Saxon European countries)

  11. 1.11Left–right self-positioning and policy preferences on the two dimensions of political competition

  12. 2.1Knowledge economy index

  13. 2.2Urban and rural areas

  14. 2.3Voting in the early 1980s and 2010s

  15. 2.4Party family vote share by urban type

  16. 2.5Regional patterns of competition, post 2010

  17. 2.6Mobilization in the 1980s

  18. 2.7Historic mobilization and regional type

  19. 2.A1Regional patterns of competition, post 2010

  20. 3.1Vote shares of social democratic parties in Western Europe

  21. 3.2Vote switching from social democratic parties conditional on LR ideology

  22. 3.3Vote switching from social democratic parties conditional on education

  23. 3.4Vote switching from social democratic parties conditional on union membership

  24. 3.5Vote switching from social democratic to other parties

  25. 3.6Vote switching from social democratic to other parties, conditional on education

  26. 3.7Vote switching between social democratic and other parties

  27. 3.8Determinants of vote choice between SD and MR

  28. 3.9Determinants of vote choice between SD and Green

  29. 4.1Composition of electorates of party families by respondents and parental class

  30. 4.2AMEs of respondents and parental class on support for party families

  31. 4.3AMEs of parental class on support for party families, across geographical regions

  32. 4.4AMEs of parental class on support for party families, across generations, for Northwestern Europe

  33. 4.5Average predicted levels of support for party families by patterns of intergenerational mobility for Northwestern Europe

  34. 4.6Average predicted levels of support for party families by patterns of intergenerational mobility among Gen X or Millennial respondents for Northwestern Europe

  35. 5.1Transition away from Social Democrats, across entire lifespan

  36. 5.2Transition away from SP, across elections

  37. 5.3Transition away from Labour, across elections

  38. 5.4Transition away from the SPD, across elections

  39. 5.5The threat of AfD, a new party entry from the right

  40. 5.6Who switches away from Social Democrats to any other party?

  41. 5.7Who switches to whom?

  42. 6.1Social democratic electoral potential and mobilization in ten European countries, 2000s and 2010s

  43. 6.2Electoral potential and mobilization for different party families in ten European countries, 2000s and 2010s

  44. 6.3Inward and outward overlaps by education, Nordic and Continental Europe

  45. 6.4Inward and outward overlaps by education, Southern Europe

  46. 6.5Inward and outward overlaps as a share of the overall electorate, comparison of magnitudes

  47. 6.A1Inward and outward overlaps by subjective class, Continental and Nordic Europe

  48. 6.A2Inward and outward overlaps by subjective class, Southern Europe

  49. 6.A3Average voting propensities among overlapping voters

  50. 7.1Voter movements

  51. 7.2Attitudinal correlates of vote switching by party family: determinants of switching out and into Social Democracy

  52. 7.3Voter movements, low-education/low-income group

  53. 7.4Attitudinal correlates of party family switching out of Social Democracy by select education-income groups

  54. 8.1Changes in the class composition of trade union membership

  55. 8.2Changes in voting patterns among union members

  56. 8.3Predicted probabilities of policy support on three dimensions

  57. 8.4Predicted probabilities of policy support among unionized voters

  58. 8.5Standpatters’ and switchers’ policy preference stances on three dimensions

  59. 9.1Support for four social democratic programmatic strategies in the entire electorate

  60. 9.2Support for four social democratic programmatic strategies among the potential social democratic electorate

  61. 9.3Support for four social democratic programmatic strategies by left–right self-positioning

  62. 9.4Support for four social democratic programmatic strategies by position on the economic dimension

  63. 9.5Support for four social democratic programmatic strategies by position on the cultural dimension

  64. 9.6Social Democrats vs. Green Left: predicted probabilities of choosing the social democratic party over the green and left-libertarian option by attitude

  65. 9.7Social Democrats vs. Radical Left: predicted probabilities of choosing the social democratic party over the radical left option by attitude

  66. 9.8Social Democrats vs. Moderate Right: predicted probabilities of choosing the social democratic party over the moderate right option by sociocultural attitude

  67. 9.9Social Democrats vs. Radical Right: predicted probabilities of choosing the social democratic party over the radical right option by attitude

  68. 9.10Support for different social democratic programmatic strategies by left–right self-positioning, Austria, Switzerland, and Sweden

  69. 9.11Support for different social democratic programmatic strategies by left–right self-positioning, Germany, Spain, and Denmark

  70. 10.1Distribution of current vote choices of voters who had chosen major left parties at t − 1

  71. 10.2Distribution of movements between prior and current election, all major left parties in the data

  72. 10.3Movement from t − 1 to t on the economic left–right scale based on the Comparative Manifesto Project for major left parties

  73. 10.4Movement from t − 1 to t on the cultural liberal–conservative scale based on the Comparative Manifesto Project for major left parties

  74. 10.5Comparing movements from t – 1 to t, economic left–right and cultural liberal–conservative scales

  75. 10.6Moderation in prior cycle and subsequent vote choice of survey respondents who had voted for major left parties in the prior cycle

  76. 11.1Parties’ positions relative to mean of the scale and their electoral payoff

  77. 11.2Parties’ positions relative to ML (Social Democracy) and ML’s vote share

  78. 12.1Predicted vote share of social democratic parties by level of fiscal consolidation and incumbency status

  79. 12.2Predicted vote share of social democratic parties by level of spending- and revenue-based consolidations and incumbency status

  80. 12.3Predicted vote share of social democratic parties by level of consolidation in different areas and incumbency status

  81. 12.A1Distribution of fiscal consolidation programs

  82. 12.A2Distribution of spending- and revenue-based consolidation programs

  83. 12.A3Distribution of different types of consolidation

  84. 13.1Leader changes in social democratic and conservative/Christian democratic parties

  85. 13.2The polling effects of leadership changes and the frequency of leadership changes

  86. 13.3Polling effects of leader changes across party families

  87. 13.4The electoral effects of leadership changes and the frequency of leadership changes

  88. 13.5The electoral effects of leadership changes and the frequency of leadership changes conditional on party family

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