New research shows how elites leverage anti-party protests to disrupt politics

Protest movements that reject political parties have an unintended consequence, according to research co-authored by a Keough School faculty expert: They empower savvy politicians, who channel them to shake up the status quo.
The findings provide a framework for understanding recent global political realignments and offer lessons for activists who want to make a meaningful impact. They are particularly relevant in an era when mass protests have become an increasingly common tool to voice dissent with powerful institutions and draw attention to overlooked issues ranging from climate and conflict to inequality and human rights.
Ann Mische, associate professor of sociology and peace studies at the University of Notre Dame, and Tomás Gold, a Notre Dame Ph.D. candidate and Ph.D. Fellow at the Keough School’s Kellogg Institute for International Studies, co-authored the study, published in the American Journal of Sociology. The authors received funding from the Keough School’s Kellogg Institute for International Studies and Nanovic Institute for European Studies as well as Notre Dame’s Graduate School.
“Despite protesters’ strong rejection of parties, political parties have not ignored the protestors,” Mische said. “In fact, many partisan actors have found ways to use this hostility to their advantage, disrupting ‘politics as usual’ and contributing to political reconfigurations that surprised both actors and spectators.”
Mische and Gold analyzed data from the Varieties of Democracy Project, which provides a variety of authoritative ways to measure democracy. The international project, widely cited by scholars, is affiliated with the Keough School’s Kellogg Institute for International Studies.
Using the data, Mische and Gold analyzed 12 case studies across Europe, Asia, and North and South America between 2008 and 2016, amid the fallout of the global financial crisis and the ongoing rejection of parties that were seen as unable or unwilling to confront it.
They found that in response to massive anti-partisan protests, these countries generally experienced one of four outcomes: internal factional challenges within highly established parties (e.g., Labour leader Jeremy Corbyn in the United Kingdom); the emergence of new or renovated parties (Podemos, or “We Can,” an anti-austerity Spanish party); the formation of new anti-incumbent party coalitions (the Broad Front UNEN and Cambiemos coalitions in Argentina) and the rise of extreme populist leaders (such as Jair Bolsonaro in Brazil).
Mische and Gold said these varied outcomes could be explained by looking at the project’s data measuring parties’ institutional strength; the degree to which parties were cohesive or fragmented; and the overall numbers of viable political parties competing for power.
They used a comparative approach that bridged insights from sociology and political science, drawing on datasets to determine how the combination of these three variables generated different opportunities for political actors to navigate the challenges to the status quo. They complemented this analysis with a process-oriented account of how party-movement interactions contributed to these diverging pathways.
“We focused on how political elites can take advantage of the fact that they are rejected by protestors,” Gold said. “That paradox lies at the heart of this paper.”
“If you reject working with the state, you cannot influence the development of policies that are important for the things that you care about.”
Ultimately, Mische and Gold said, the study could serve as a cautionary tale to protestors who reject political parties rather than trying to negotiate with them. This rejection can paradoxically undermine activist goals by amplifying distrust in institutions and paving the way for populist demagogues.
“Sometimes you need social movements to challenge entrenched systems and respond to the needs and aspirations of the people,” Mische said, adding that further research could help explore the dynamics of insider-outsider coalitions for enacting reforms. “But if you reject working with the state, then you cannot influence the development of policies that are important for the things that you care about. You may, instead, empower autocrats who don’t share your values but are adept at weaponizing institutional distrust. Understanding this dynamic is important to working for change and to strengthening global democracy at a time when institutions are increasingly under attack.”
Photo by Brian Sims via Flickr, licensed under Creative Commons.
Latest Research
- NSF CI Compass hosts FAIR Data Working Group to help major facilities, like MagLab, find data solutionsAs research facilities and their staff of researchers and scientists grapple daily with producing, storing, and preserving their petabytes of data for new discoveries and studies — others need to construct systems that can enable them to build on their findings. Within the data collected each day…
- Fatal school shootings have lasting impact on local economiesNew research from the University of Notre Dame offers the first large-scale empirical evidence that community anxiety caused by fatal school shootings can impact routine consumption behaviors like grocery shopping and dining out.
- Navigating the Waters of Peace: Challenges and Opportunities in the Implementation of Colombia's Peace AgreementNearly half the commitments outlined in Colombia's historic peace accord face significant challenges and may not happen in time unless policymakers make several key interventions, a new report from the University of Notre Dame warns. The report…
- Klau Institute’s Melsheimer Fellows learn about civil and human rights while serving South Bend communityOn a Wednesday evening in early April, a variation on the game of bingo was being played in the old St. Casimir Catholic School on the west side of South Bend. An instructor from One More Citizen, a nonprofit organization that offers free citizenship classes, was calling out questions from…
- Exploring Product-Market Fit: Inside the ESTEEM Unusual AcademyThis past year, several ESTEEM students had the opportunity to participate in the pilot of a new program: The ESTEEM Unusual Academy, led by Unusual Ventures Co-Founder and Managing Partner, John Vrionis.…
- Franco Institute announces inaugural Humanities Faculty Fellows and new Research Innovation CollaborativesThe Franco Family Institute for Liberal Arts and the Public Good, formerly the Institute for Scholarship in the Liberal Arts, continues its support of innovative research in the College of Arts & Letters with a new name and expanded mission. Seventeen faculty…