Working with data
The webpage focuses on political parties and their perception of nationalism and national identity. Firstly, the webpage contains a profile of each party in a national context based on basic facts, well known officials, and their electoral gains in national and European elections. Secondly, it gives an analytical insight into parties’ perceptions of national identity and nationalism. The parties are categorised according to mentions of related to national identity issues in election manifestos. These issues cover minorities, national myths, European integration, national sovereignty, integration of immigrants and related categories.
Selected case studies show parties’ "real politics" and strategies using national identity to politicise certain policies, such as using national mythologies in election campaigns. Case studies focus on up to three specific national identity issues for each country. They cover opposite positions of different parties to show different strategies and policies used to attract voters. For this purpose, visual (e.g. billboards) and text (e.g. given speeches) material was analyzed.
Acknowlegment
The Visegrad parties' profiles from 2006 - 2010 are based on a scholarly study published at Masaryk University: Černoch Filip, Husák Jan, Schütz Ondrej, Vít Michal (2011): Political parties and nationalism in Visegrad countries. Brno: Masarykova univerzita, Mezinárodní politologický ústav, Monography servies 46, 2011; and on the scholarly paper Husák Jan, Schütz Ondrej, Vít Michal (2012): National identity of the Political parties in Visegrad region and their European dimension, Journal on European Integration and Federalism, Science Po, Nice.
Your narrowed Your search to 5 articles:
Christian Democratic Union (Christlich-Demokratische Union - CDU)
The Christian Democratic Union (CDU) is the biggest catch-all party in the German political system.
Social Democratic Party (Sozialdemokratische Partei Deutschlands - SPD)
The Social Democratic Party (SDP) have swopped roles with the CDU in the last decade.
Greens (Listenvereinigung Bündnis 90/Grüne-Bürger-Innenbewegungen/Die Grünen - Bündnis 90/Die Grünen)
The party joined the German parliament in the early 1980s as a result of the 1968 “cultural revolution”.
Party of the Left (Die Linkspartei - Die Linke)
Before the 2005 election the successor of the Communist party of the DDR (SED), PDS, created a partnership with a minor left formation based in the western part of Germany.
Alternative für Deutschland - AfD
The right populist formation was founded in winter 2013 to establish discussion on German European policy and generally on the future of common Union currency. Although the party profile aimed to be a conservative one; the election campaign showed that party got a lot of support as a protest movement. The election manifesto as well as public activities displayed the movement more as a single issue party than a serious conservative opposition to Merkel. However, the party did not pass the 5 % threshold, with a vote of 4.9 % the AfD can be seen as a real challenger to Merkel’s European policy.