Communication Networks & Social Change (CNSC) research group is pleased to invite you to the Seminar: «The internal democracy of the crisis parties in Western Europe: a quantitative analysis of the role of digitalization, ideology, and populism», given by Jorge Bronet Campos, BA in Political Science (UCM) and an MA in Knowledge Management (UOC).
The seminar will be held, in hybrid format, on Wednesday, December 10 at 10:00 am (CEST) in room C1.17 of the Interdisciplinary R&I Hub (building C).
Venue
Interdisciplinary R&I Hub (building C - room C1.17)
Rambla del Poblenou, 154
08018 Barcelona
Espanya
When
10/12/2025 10.00h
Organized by
Universitat Oberta de Catalunya, Communication Networks & Social Change (CNSC) research group
Program
Abstract
Previous studies on the internal democracy of new digital parties in Western Europe suggest a plebiscitary tendency, but most focus on a limited number of cases. This paper aims to empirically analyze the intra-party democracy of electorally successful new parties in Western Europe and identify the main factors that may influence it. Drawing on data from the second round of the Political Parties Database (PPDB) and the first wave of the Populism and Political Parties Expert Survey (POPPA), this study covers more than 100 parties across 13 countries. Adopting a generational approach, we define a cohort of “crisis parties”—founded between the economic crisis and the pandemic—and examine their internal democracy in comparison to older parties, using Von dem Berge and Poguntke’s IPD model and Böhmelt et al.,’s (2022) framework, with ideology, digitalization, and populism treated as explanatory variables. Our findings show that being a crisis party—even a highly digitalized one on the left—does not entail more plebiscitary forms of intra-party democracy. Digitalization emerges as the most consistent predictor shaping intra-party democracy, while the cohort effect matters only insofar as crisis parties are more populist than older parties, which ultimately reduces their internal democracy.
BA in Political Science (UCM) and an MA in Knowledge Management (UOC). He is currently a PhD student of the Society, Technology, and Culture programme (UOC). His research line is about the IPD (Intra-Party Democracy) of the European new digital parties.