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The Politics of Religious Party Change
Islamist and Catholic Parties in Comparative Perspective

The book examines how religious institutional structures affect Islamist and Catholic political parties in the Middle East and Western Europe.

A. Kadir Yildirim (Author)

9781009170741, Cambridge University Press

Hardback, published 5 January 2023

320 pages
23.5 x 15.8 x 2.5 cm, 0.64 kg

'Religious parties are often studied on a case-by case basis even though they arise in many different societies and various faith traditions. By viewing them comparatively, Yildirim uncovers how their relationship with two other actors-formal religious authorities and the broad social movements that spawn them-shape their political trajectory.' Nathan Brown, Professor of Political Science and International Affairs, George Washington University

The Politics of Religious Party Change examines the ideological change and secularization of religious political parties and asks: when and why do religious parties become less anti-system? In a comparative analysis, the book traces the striking similarities in the historical origins of Islamist and Catholic parties in the Middle East and Western Europe, chronicles their conflicts with existing religious authorities, and analyzes the subsequently divergent trajectories of Islamist and Catholic parties. In examining how religious institutional structures affect the actions of religious parties in electoral politics, the book finds that centralized and hierarchical religious authority structures - such as the Vatican - incentivize religious parties to move in more pro-system, secular, and democratic directions. By contrast, less centralized religious authority structures - such as in Sunni Islam - create more permissive environments for religious parties to be anti-system and more prone to freely-formed parties and hybrid party movements.

1. Explaining religious party change
2. Catholic and Islamic religious institutions
3. Anticlericalism, religious revival, and the rise of religious political identities
4. The origins of religio-political identity
5. Intra-party conflict.

Subject Areas: Islamic life & practice [HRHP], Islam [HRH], Roman Catholicism, Roman Catholic Church [HRCC7], Christian Churches & denominations [HRCC], Christianity [HRC], Religion & beliefs [HR]

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