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The franchise bargain that once divided Canadian political parties into separate spheres of authority – with members on the ground and elites at the centre – has been displaced. Renegotiating the Bargain explains why parties have reformed their internal decision-making structures and shows how the new arrangement operates. Rob Currie-Wood draws on in-depth interviews with current and former party officials, party governance documents, and election financing reports to trace organizational change within Canadian political parties since the end of the twentieth century. Rank-and-file members now…mehr

Produktbeschreibung
The franchise bargain that once divided Canadian political parties into separate spheres of authority – with members on the ground and elites at the centre – has been displaced. Renegotiating the Bargain explains why parties have reformed their internal decision-making structures and shows how the new arrangement operates. Rob Currie-Wood draws on in-depth interviews with current and former party officials, party governance documents, and election financing reports to trace organizational change within Canadian political parties since the end of the twentieth century. Rank-and-file members now possess the same participatory rights as long-time activists and elected officials, but the central apparatus now also has capacity to regulate membership participation in key areas of policy-making, leadership selection, candidate nominations, and campaigning. Renegotiating the Bargain demonstrates that parties remain meaningful sites of civic participation in Canada's democratic life. Its findings reveal not only the evolution of power-sharing arrangements within parties but also how party democracy works.
Autorenporträt
Rob Currie-Wood is assistant professor of political science in the Department of Economics, Justice, and Policy Studies at Mount Royal University and a recipient of the Canadian Political Science Association's Vincent Lemieux Prize. He is co-author, with William P. Cross and Scott Pruysers, of The Political Party in Canada and has published in leading journals such as Political Geography, Party Politics, and the Canadian Journal of Political Science.