AbstractsPolitical Science

The Big Crunch

by Magnus Tronstad




Institution: Högskolan Dalarna
Department:
Year: 2016
Keywords: left; right; Left-Right; ideological distance; Swedish party system; polarization; convergence; divergence; ideological continuum; ideological scale; political distance; Social Sciences; Political Science; Samhällsvetenskap; Statsvetenskap
Posted: 02/05/2017
Record ID: 2129896
Full text PDF: http://urn.kb.se/resolve?urn=urn:nbn:se:du-22456


Abstract

Previous research claims that there has been a narrowing of distance between the Swedish political parties. Typically, such research into political distance has primarily focused on studying voters rather than the political parties themselves. In this article, the author conducts a longitudinal analysis of Comparative Manifesto Project data to determine if, and to what extent, the political parties have converged ideologically on a Left-Right continuum in the period 1991-2010. After first unraveling the concept of political distance, the author moves on to explain why the ideological dispersion of political parties is an important and consequential characteristic within party systems. Furthermore, the author argues that the Left-Right ideological scale continues to be a highly useful model with which to conceptualize and study this characteristic. The author then discusses the methodological approach and explains why quantitative manifesto data, often overlooked in favor of voter interview data, is deemed a valid and reliable material for measuring the ideological positions of political parties. The findings are that there indeed have been over all tendencies of ideological convergence between the blocs and that, in terms of how political parties are dispersed on a Left- Right ideological continuum, by 2010, the Swedish party system (the Sweden Democrats excluded) had become much less polarized than it had been in 1991.