Abstract
Radical left parties actively encourage the participation of their members in internal decision-making and insist on promoting organised links to trade unions and social movements. As a party family, they deviate from what is considered to be the trend in which Western political parties have turned their backs on their social roots. Drawing on the experience of South European radical left parties from the fall of the Berlin Wall until the recent financial crisis, we argue that ideology, electoral incentives, party competition and external events explain the radical left's pronounced emphasis on linkage, while organisational trajectory explains variation within the party family in terms of the linkage strategies pursued. © 2013 Copyright Taylor and Francis Group, LLC.
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Tsakatika, M., & Lisi, M. (2013). “Zippin” up My Boots, Goin’ Back to My Roots’: Radical Left Parties in Southern Europe. South European Society and Politics, 18(1), 1–19. https://doi.org/10.1080/13608746.2012.758447
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