Political party

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Democratically-elected political parties have had the common purpose of participating in government, but they have developed differently in different countries, and their activities have had a significant bearing upon the development of domestic policies in those countries.

Origins

Active political parties have emerged in virtually every country that has a democratic constitution (elsewhere, political parties have served mainly as passive agents of the state). A 1967 study attributed the creation of the existing parties of the western democracies to four "cleavages" that had arisen from national and industrial revolutions; which were identified as centre versus periphery, church versus state, landowners versus industrialists, and capitalists versus workers [1]. Subsequent research covering a range of countries, indicated that similar party structures had persisted during the rest of the twentieth century [2]. The 1967 study had observed that, with a few exceptions, party structures had become "frozen" in the patterns of the 1920s but later studies indicated that, although those patterns had not changed, increasing signs of volatility suggested the prospect of future change [3].

References