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Political party
An organized group that seeks to influence and control government by nominating candidates, campaigning, and mobilizing voters around policy goals or a shared identity.
Linkage institution
A structure (such as a political party) that connects citizens to decision-makers by translating social demands into government action.
Political elite recruitment
The party function of identifying, selecting, and training future leaders (legislators, ministers, executives) who may gain power.
Interest aggregation
The process of combining diverse social demands into a governing agenda; weak aggregation can lead to party splintering or reliance on coercion.
Party platform
A party’s package of issue positions and policy goals that simplifies choices for voters and guides governing priorities.
Party label/cue
A recognizable party “brand” that helps voters make decisions without needing to evaluate every issue or candidate in depth.
Party discipline
The tendency of party members (especially legislators) to vote with the party leadership and follow the party line.
Centralized party
A party organization where leaders tightly control candidate selection and messaging, often producing higher party discipline.
Candidate-centered politics
A setting where individual politicians build personal followings and funding networks and may defy party leaders more often.
Candidate selection
How parties choose nominees (e.g., local primaries vs. leadership appointment), shaping accountability and party control.
Party-state fusion
A relationship where the ruling party is deeply intertwined with the state, so party institutions penetrate governance rather than compete separately.
Parliamentary system
A system where the executive is drawn from the legislature; governments depend on maintaining legislative confidence, often strengthening party unity.
Confidence vote
A legislative vote that can remove the government in a parliamentary system; the risk of losing it encourages strong party discipline.
Presidential system
A system where the executive and legislature are typically elected separately, allowing legislators more freedom to break with party leadership without collapsing the government.
Dominant-party strategy (authoritarian use)
How authoritarian or hybrid regimes use a dominant party to channel participation, divide opposition, distribute benefits, and reinforce executive control while maintaining elections.
Party system
The overall structure of party competition in a country (how many parties are viable, how power alternates, and how parties relate to society and institutions).
Viable party
A party that can realistically win seats and influence governing outcomes; more important than counting parties that exist “on paper.”
One-party system
A system where one party controls the state and meaningful competition is absent; opposition may be banned or politically irrelevant.
Dominant-party system
A system with multiple legal parties and elections, but one party consistently wins and dominates the political arena.
Two-party system
A system where two major parties dominate elections and government formation; smaller parties may exist but rarely govern.
Multiparty system
A system where more than two parties are viable; coalition governments are common because no single party consistently wins a majority.
Coalition government
A government formed when multiple parties cooperate to reach a legislative majority, common in multiparty systems.
Social cleavage
A deep, lasting division (ethnic, religious, regional, class, urban-rural) that parties mobilize and organize around.
Clientelism
An exchange of targeted benefits (jobs, contracts, services) for political support, often shaping parties and voting behavior.
Electoral system
The rules that translate votes into political outcomes (especially legislative seats and executive offices).
Plurality
Winning by receiving the most votes, not necessarily more than 50% (often confused with “majority”).
First-past-the-post (FPTP) / Single-member district plurality (SMDP)
A system where each district elects one representative and the candidate with the most votes wins; tends to reward large parties and penalize small ones.
Proportional representation (PR)
A system where seats are allocated to parties roughly in proportion to their share of the vote, often producing multiparty legislatures and coalitions.
Party-list PR
A PR method where parties present lists of candidates and receive seats based on vote share, encouraging national/platform-based campaigning.
Electoral threshold
A minimum vote share required to win seats in many PR systems; can reduce fragmentation but exclude small parties.
Mixed electoral system
A system combining district-based elections with proportional allocation, aiming to balance local representation and proportional outcomes.
Mixed-member proportional (MMP)
A mixed system where voters typically cast two votes (district candidate and party), and party-list seats adjust totals to improve proportionality (e.g., Germany, New Zealand).
Redistricting
Redrawing district boundaries (often after population change), which can alter representation and party advantage in district systems.
Gerrymandering
Manipulating district boundaries to advantage a party or group, influencing how votes convert into seats.
Campaign finance regulation
Rules on raising and spending political money intended to limit corruption and create fairer competition, affecting electoral integrity.
Ballot access (candidate eligibility rules)
Rules determining who can run (e.g., vetting candidates), which can sharply limit competition even if elections exist.
Electoral integrity
The degree to which elections are protected from fraud, coercion, and malpractice through credible administration, transparency, and rule enforcement.
Competitiveness
The extent to which opposition can run and plausibly win elections under fair conditions (media access, rules, and enforcement matter).
Suffrage
Who has the right to vote and how easily they can access voting (registration barriers and eligibility rules affect participation).
Voter turnout
The share of eligible citizens who vote, shaped by registration rules, mobilization, competition, efficacy, and security/intimidation.
Party identification
A long-term psychological or social attachment to a party that shapes voting behavior across multiple elections.
Retrospective voting
Voting based on evaluating incumbents’ recent performance (e.g., economy, security, corruption), rewarding or punishing those in power.
Civil society
The space between individuals and the state where people associate voluntarily (unions, advocacy groups, religious orgs), shaping participation and accountability.
Interest group
An organization that seeks to influence policy without running candidates for office (e.g., lobbying, litigation, strikes, media campaigns).
Social movement
A sustained, organized mass effort to create or resist political/social change, often using protests and other contentious tactics.
Nongovernmental organization (NGO)
A non-state organization (domestic or international) that provides services or advocates on issues like rights, development, or the environment; may face state restrictions.
Pluralism
An interest representation pattern where many competing groups seek influence; power is dispersed across multiple organizations.
Corporatism
An interest representation pattern where a few large, state-recognized groups (often peak labor/business) negotiate closely with government over policy.
Media freedom (and censorship)
The extent to which media can investigate and criticize power versus being constrained by ownership, licensing, censorship, intimidation, or political connections.
Social media (mobilization, surveillance, disinformation)
Digital platforms that can lower organizing costs for parties/movements but can also be used by states/parties for surveillance, targeted propaganda, and disinformation.