Acknowledgements
List of Abbreviations
Chapter 1. Introduction
Chapter 2. The Theory
Chapter 3. A Guide for a Systematic Qualitative Analysis
Chapter 4. Chile
Chapter 5. Costa Rica
Chapter 6. Uruguay
Chapter 7. All Things Considered
Chapter 8. Conclusions
Appendix List of Interviewees
References
Fernando Rosenblatt is an Associate Professor at the Universidad
Diego Portales, Chile. He studies party organizations and party
activism in Latin America. He has published in Perspectives on
Politics, Comparative Political Studies, Party Politics,
Governance, Latin American Politics and Society, Latin American
Research Review, Democratization, Política y Gobierno, and Revista
de Ciencia Política. In collaboration
with Verónica Pérez and Rafael Piñeiro, he coauthored How Party
Activism Survives: Uruguay´s Frente Amplio (2020).
Political parties are an integral part of most political systems.
Rosenblatt conducted extensive interviews from 2010 to 2014 with
many political activists in Chile, Costa Rica, and Uruguay, three
of Latin America's currently most stable democracies. He attributes
the stability of these regimes to "party vibrancy," a condition
based on party institutionalization not tied to a particular
candidate or factor. Despite many challenges, parties in Chile,
Costa Rica, and Uruguay have survived as significant channels of
democratic representation and served their nations well. While
drawing the examples from Latin America, Rosenblatt's conclusions
are broadly applicable to political parties anywhere in the world.
The book belongs in all academic libraries." -CHOICE, J. A. Rhodes,
emeritus, Luther College
Fernando Rosenblatt's well-researched and highly engaging book goes
beyond scholars' common focus on party institutionalization and
examines under what conditions Latin American parties maintain
vibrancy and guarantee the active, dynamic representation of
citizen interests. By weaving together various causal factors,
ranging from historical trauma to exit barriers, Rosenblatt
constructs a novel explanation that combines rational choice and
historical institutionalism in imaginative ways." -Wendy Hunter,
Professor of Government, University of Texas-Austin
This book will subvert conventional wisdom on party organizations,
party building, and institutionalization. Rosenblatt's masterful
case study research also illuminates why even if 'necessary for
democracy' to work properly, vibrant political parties are so
incredibly difficult to find (and to build from scratch) in
contemporary times." -Juan Pablo Luna, Professor of Political
Science, PUC-Chile
The Reproduction of Party Vibrancy in Latin America presents a
compelling explanation for why some Latin American parties have
flourished, while others have decayed. Based on extensive field
research in Chile, Costa Rica, and Uruguay, the book represents an
important contribution to our understanding of Latin American
parties and party vibrancy more generally." -Raúl L. Madrid,
Professor of Government, University of Texas-Austin
At a time when traditional parties seem to be wearing out in
democracies around the world, Fernando Rosenblatt's book provides
much-needed insight on the factors that help parties maintain their
vibrancy. Through a careful comparative analysis of major parties
in Chile, Costa Rica, and Uruguay, Rosenblatt demonstrates that
ossification and decay are not the inevitable fate of political
parties, and he illuminates essential organizational
characteristics that counteract such tendencies and keep parties
vibrant. This book is a major contribution to the comparative study
of political parties and democratic representation, in Latin
America and beyond." -Kenneth M. Roberts, Richard J. Schwartz
Professor of Government, Cornell University
In this book, Fernando Rosenblatt makes an invaluable contribution
to the literature on Latin American political parties and beyond.
This work is the result of rigorous research ... Rosenblatt's work
is exemplary ... this book is an obligatory reference for students
of political parties and comparative politics." -Latin American
Politics and Society
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