Measurement of Party Position and Party Competition in Taiwan
In: Issues & studies: a social science quarterly on China, Taiwan, and East Asian affairs, Volume 40, Issue 3-4, p. 101-136
Abstract
This study examines & evaluates the existing research on party position in Taiwan & what this literature reveals about the state of inter-party competition during the island's first fifteen years of multiparty elections. There has been an increasing diversity in methodologies used to measure party position in Taiwan, including mass & elite surveys, propaganda content analysis, & elite interviews. Too much of the research has been carried out in isolation by individual researchers, however, with little reference to other existing studies. Many studies have focused on single years & used completely different measurement systems, making time series analysis impossible. There is a need for these schemes to become institutionalized & carried out by wider research teams rather than single scholars. This study argues that the existing data shows that between 1991 & 2000, Taiwan's parties moved from polarized positions toward a pattern of moderate differentiation, similar to parties in mature democracies. Taiwan's parties stress issues, compete on multiple issue cleavages, & -- although having shown a degree of movement toward the center -- remain clearly differentiated. The case is not so clear for the post-2000 period. 6 Tables, 5 Figures, 1 Appendix, 36 References. Adapted from the source document.
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English
ISSN: 1013-2511
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