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5 - Party Formation and Political Mobilization in Comparative Perspective

from Part II - Phoenix from the Ashes

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  10 March 2022

Alanna C. Torres-Van Antwerp
Affiliation:
Center for New American Security
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Summary

Chapter 5 expands the tracing of the theorized causal mechanisms beyond Egypt to see how far these mechanisms travel and if they operate in the same way across other cases of founding elections. Each case comparison begins with an analysis of the processes of party formation, linking the political opportunity structure of the authoritarian era to the contours of the ideological landscape and the strategic incentives facing different groups at this juncture. Each case then examines the evidence for the mechanisms linking the authoritarian era political opportunity structure to the organizational and persuasive resources available to each political group and their ability to use different mobilization tactics. As in Egypt, opposition groups that were excluded from electoral participation possess similar organizational and symbolic resources and thus are able to use more effective voter mobilization tactics than other political groups, resulting in their electoral success. The accounts find evidence for this causal chain in Tunisia, Poland, Czechoslovakia, and Zambia, but the mechanism operates differently in the case of Brazil, offering useful insight into the scope conditions under which the mechanisms theorized in the Egypt case operate elsewhere.

Type
Chapter
Information
Legacies of Repression in Egypt and Tunisia
Authoritarianism, Political Mobilization, and Founding Elections
, pp. 174 - 236
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Print publication year: 2022

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