Responsible Partisanship?
The Evolution of American Political Parties Since 1950
Edited by John C. Green and Paul S. Herrnson
January 2003
248 pages, 6 x 9
Studies in Government and Public Policy
Paper ISBN 978-0-7006-1217-8, $17.95
More
than fifty years have passed since the American Political Science
Association published Toward a More Responsible Two-Party
System, a controversial report that addressed the lack of
national cohesion within the major parties. Although parties have
changed a great deal since then, they remain a critical component
of American democracy.
While the possibilities and limits of responsible party government
have been central topics in the literature since 1950, this book
is the first to reassess all aspects of the APSA report. Here a
distinguished group of scholarsamong them Charles O. Jones,
Barbara Sinclair, Frank J. Sorauf, John Bibby, and Gerald Pomperexamines
the effectiveness, accountability, and relevance of parties to the
democratic process.
These articles cover all major relevant topics, focusing on recent
changes in laws that govern parties, innovations in party organization,
party finance, and the relationships among political consultants
and parties. They examine the place of the party in governmentincluding
chapters on the changing role of parties in Congress and in the
presidencyand also consider the roles of parties among the
electorate, examining trends in voting behavior, party identification,
and ideology. A capstone essay by Leon Epstein, the dean of American
party scholars, reviews the ongoing quest for responsible partisanship
over the past half century.
These contributors offer a mixed assessment of the two-party system,
showing that parties are in many respects stronger at the national
level than they were in 1950 but not necessarily more responsible.
The most comprehensive description and analysis of American parties
now available, Responsible Partisanship? should become required
reading for all students and citizens concerned with making parties
more accountable instruments of government.
A thoughtful, tough-minded look at where we are today and
how we got there. A most impressive and welcome contribution.William
J. Crotty, author of The Party Game
An essential guide to under-standing the current condition
of Americas parties.Joseph A. Schlesinger,
author of Political Parties and the Winning of Office
A must read for anyone interested in American political
parties. David R. Mayhew, author of Divided
We Govern: Party Control, Lawmaking, and Investigations, 19461990
A comprehensive and fresh perspective on the indispensable
yet fragile place of political parties in American democracy.Sidney
M. Milkis, author of Political Parties and Constitutional
Government
JOHN C. GREEN is director of the Ray C. Bliss Institute
of Applied Politics and professor of political science at the University
of Akron. He is coauthor of The Bully Pulpit:
The Politics of Protestant Clergy and coeditor of The
State of the Parties, now in its fourth edition.
PAUL S. HERRNSON is director of the Center for American
Politics and Citizenship and professor of government and politics
at the University of MarylandCollege Park. He is the author
of Congressional Elections: Campaigning at Home and in Washington
and Party Campaigning in the 1980s.
CONTRIBUTORS: John F. Bibby, Leon D. Epstein, John C. Green,
Paul S. Herrnson, Charles O. Jones, David B. Magleby, L. Sandy Maisel,
Jerome M. Mileur, Kelly D. Patterson, Gerald M. Pomper, Barbara
Sinclair, Frank J. Sorauf, James A. Thurber, Marc D. Weiner, Herbert
F. Weisberg, John Kenneth White
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