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| Criticism of parties (III)
Party democracy is based on the party-political commitment of citizens. As we have already established, however, the social composition of party memberships does not mirror the social composition of society as a whole. Women and manual workers, for instance, are under-proportionately represented in all the parties. Indeed this situation is skewed even further to the detriment of these groups when a distinction is made between formal membership and active party-political activity. The upper middle class dominate the composition of party membership (...). Nonetheless, this lack of adequate representation of society's true social composition should not be over dramatized. Given that the "people's parties" have to take into account the needs of their voters, party policy and party interests are not necessarily and certainly not exclusively determined by the social standing of its members. [Uwe Backes/Eckhard Jesse, taken from: Informationen zur politischen Bildung 207, Parteiendemokratie, Bonn BpB 1997]
One controversial issue surrounds the question as to whether the population actually regards political parties as being the legitimate representatives of its interests and as to whether party democracy is deeply rooted in the consciousness of the population (legitimized).
[Uwe Backes/Eckhard Jesse, taken from: Informationen zur politischen Bildung 207, Parteiendemokratie, Bonn BpB 1997]
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Subjects: Human
Rights I Democracy I Parties
I Examples I
Europe
I
Globalisation
I United Nations
I Sustainability
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