Social cleavages and electoral support in Turkey -- toward convergence?


Autoria(s): Hazama, Yasushi
Data(s)

13/06/2006

13/06/2006

01/09/2003

Resumo

Studies on Western democracies have shown that deep-seated social cleavages stabilize the electoral behavior and thus reduce electoral volatility. But how do social cleavages affect a party system that is undergoing democratic consolidation, such as in Turkey? In this study, investigations were carried out on long- and short-term relationships between social cleavages (religiosity, ethnicity, and sectarism) and electoral volatility in Turkey during the 1961-2002 period. Cross-sectional multiple regressions were applied to electoral and demographic data at the provincial level. The results showed that in the long-term, social cleavages on the whole have increased volatility rather than reduced it. The cleavage-volatility relationship, however, has changed over time. Repeated elections have mitigated the volatile effect of social cleavages on the voting behavior, as political parties have become more representative of the existent social cleavages.

Formato

447072 bytes

application/pdf

Identificador

The Developing Economies 41.3 (2003.9): 362-387

http://hdl.handle.net/2344/110

The Developing Economies

41

3

362

387

Idioma(s)

en

eng

Publicador

Institute of Developing Economies, JETRO

日本貿易振興会アジア経済研究所

Palavras-Chave #Turkey #Politics #Electoral systems #Social structure #トルコ #政治 #選挙制度 #社会構造 #314.8  #METU Turkey トルコ #342.8
Tipo

Article

Journal Article