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Partisan Attachment and Democracy in Mexico: Some Cautionary Observations
Authors:D. Xavier Medina Vidal  Antonio Ugues  Jr.  Shaun Bowler  Jonathan Hiskey
Affiliation:Doctoral student in U.S. and comparative politics at the University of California, Riverside.;Doctoral student in comparative politics at the University of California, Riverside.;Professor in the Department of Political Science at the University of California, Riverside.;Associate professor of political science at Vanderbilt University.
Abstract:Party identification is a central concept in studies of parties and elections. Drawing from an extensive literature linking the concept of party identification to the understanding of Mexico's electoral politics, this article explores how the Mexican experience informs the understanding of party identification in general, especially in emerging democracies. There, voters' attachments to political parties are usually seen both as essential to and a positive sign of democratic development. This study finds evidence consistent with these arguments in the Mexican case but also identifies aspects of Mexican party identification that are not so clearly supportive of democratic politics; that indeed may delay or even undermine democratization. These findings illustrate the relevance of the Mexican experience to the wider literature on parties and elections, particularly the well-documented relationship between party identifications and democratization.
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