C 2024

Political Parties and the Crisis of Democracy: Organization, Resilience, and Reform

KOPECKÝ, Petr

Basic information

Original name

Political Parties and the Crisis of Democracy: Organization, Resilience, and Reform

Authors

KOPECKÝ, Petr

Edition

Oxford, p. 108-127, 20 pp. 2024

Publisher

Elsevier

Other information

Language

English

Type of outcome

Chapter(s) of a specialized book

Field of Study

50601 Political science

Country of publisher

United Kingdom of Great Britain and Northern Ireland

Confidentiality degree

is not subject to a state or trade secret

Publication form

electronic version available online

Organization unit

CEVRO University

EID Scopus

2-s2.0-85198734371

Keywords in English

Czech parties, party organization, intra-party democracy, party members, leadership selection, Czech party system, parties and democracy

Tags

Reviewed
Changed: 22/12/2025 23:54, Mgr. Jan Neugebauer, Ph.D., MBA

Abstract

In the original language

If one would look for trends characterizing the Czech party system in the 2020s, it would be fragmentation and a wave of new anti-establishment parties. Although relatively stable and electorally predictable in the past, the Czech party system has registered fundamental changes in recent years. The influx of many newcomers changed the number of parties in the parliamentary arena and influenced the issues structuring political competition. No longer driven by the ideological struggle, the conflict began to be drawn along the lines of the political establishment versus anti-establishment parties. Many of the latter were often short-lived, haunted by intra-party divisions and conflicts. We focus on these recent party system transformations, mainly on the surge of anti-establishment parties exemplifying the most significant of these changes. Our findings highlight how several of their organizational features influence their survival, pre-disposing their political fates. Our analysis shows what the fragmented party system means for government formation and democratic development.