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2018 | 2 (47) | 188–200

Article title

Keeping Parties Together? The Evolution of Israel’s Anti-Defection Law

Authors

Content

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EN

Abstracts

EN
In 1991, the Knesset passed a package of legislation with the aim of preventing the rampant party switching and defections by elected representatives. At the time of its adoption, the so-called anti-defection law was supported by an all-party consensus. Although the legislation has remained in effect, its apparent continuity conceals the way in which it has become transformed from what was at first an “efficient” institution to a “redistributive” one (Tsebelis 1990). In this paper, I review the development of the Israeli anti-defection law and argue that whereas at the initial moment of its adoption the anti-defection law was considered to benefit all parties in the system, over time it has become an instrument in the hands of the governing coalition to manipulate divisions and engineer further defections among the opposition in order to shore up its often fragile legislative base.

Year

Volume

Pages

188–200

Physical description

Contributors

  • Concordia University in Montreal (Canada)

References

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Document Type

Publication order reference

Identifiers

YADDA identifier

bwmeta1.element.desklight-d7a38901-b15d-4fe8-b8a5-4bbc4e386ce5
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