Depleting democracies provides an analysis of the radical right’s interactions with mainstream parties and the effect they have on setting political agendas in sensitive areas such as minority policies and asylum regulations. It asks to what extent the radical right has changed the quality of democracy in Eastern Europe: does its electoral strength, its capacity for political blackmail and its coalition potential actually translate into impact?
The book compares three groups of countries that are distinct in terms of the relevance of radical right parties: Bulgaria and Slovakia; Hungary, Poland and Romania; and the Czech Republic and Estonia. It follows a mixed-methods approach, combining quantitative analysis of survey data with qualitative, comparative analysis of archival material and other texts to determine the causal role radical right parties play in influencing parties, policies and ultimately democratic quality in the seven countries.
Depleting democracies advances theory on radical right actors in the political process and contributes to empirical research across the region. Its results are particularly relevant to the debate on democratic transformation and the effects of radical right parties.
Table of Content
Introduction
1 Conceptualizing the radical right and its impact: from politics to policies to polity
2 Cases and contexts: countries and parties, culture and politics
3 Position shifts: radical right impact on mainstream parties
4 Policy shifts: radical right impact on policies regarding minority and asylum issues
5 Polity shifts: the radical right and democratic quality in the region
Conclusion
Appendix
Index
About the author
Michael Minkenberg is Professor of Comparative Politics at the European University Viadrina Frankfurt (Oder)Zsuzsanna Végh is a Researcher at the Chair of Comparative Politics at the European University Viadrina Frankfurt (Oder)