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Bringing Women to the Party
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Table of Contents

Introduction: a democratic paradox?; 1. The puzzle of CDU policy making on women's issues; 2. The corporatist catch-all party model; 3. The postwar CDU: origins of a corporatist catch-all party; 4. The emergence of the Women's Union, 1969–1982; 5. The Women's Union in the dominant coalition, 1982–1989; 6. Looking eastward: the Women's Union and cobbled coalitions, 1989–1998; 7. The rise of Angela Merkel: policy and personnel decisions of the CDU in unified Germany; 8. Christian democracy with and without corporatism: policy making on women's issues in Austria, Italy and the Netherlands; Conclusion; Appendix A: list of cited interviews.

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Develops the concept of the corporatist catch-all party to explain how the CDU has responded to changing demands from women.

About the Author

Sarah Elise Wiliarty is Assistant Professor of Government at Wesleyan University. Her research interests include political parties, women and politics, and Christian Democracy. Professor Wiliarty has published articles in German Politics and Politics and Gender and co-edited The Transformation of Postwar Germany: Democracy, Prosperity and Nationhood (1999, with John S. Brady and Beverly Crawford).

Reviews

'Sarah Wiliarty provides a fascinating look inside one of the largest and most important political parties in Europe. In closely analyzing a 'traditional' party's response to gender issues, in developing a new and compelling perspective on party organization, and in linking the empirical literature on political parties to normative democratic theory, this book deserves a wide audience.' David Art, Tufts University

'This is one of the most important works yet written on one of the most important political parties in modern Europe. Sarah Wiliarty's insightful analysis of the CDU's internal dynamics is a major contribution to our understanding of a key player in German democracy. It also offers a fresh perspective on how organizational structures shape intra-party policy making.' Clay Clemens, College of William and Mary

'Was Angela Merkel's rise to become the first woman chancellor in German history an accident of party politics or a miracle of gender representation? Wiliarty shows how both party politics and women's mobilization transformed the CDU, a religious, conservative party, away from its patriarchal ideas about women and family (called 'traditional') and led not only to Merkel's breakthrough role but to her party's leadership in providing paid family leave for women and men. But even more fundamentally, Wiliarty shows that careful attention to gender politics can explain a great deal about how parties themselves function. The corporatist catch-all party that Wiliarty describes as the CDU model may be increasingly the style for all political parties in the age of identity politics and multiple interest groups vying for influence.' Myra Marx Ferree, University of Wisconsin

'This is an excellent piece of research, utilizing high-quality, historical, and comparative methodology to answer the timely question of how conservative political parties respond to women's demands. The quality and scope of the analysis will allow the book to reach a broad international audience at undergraduate, graduate, and scholarly levels.' Kathrin Zippel, Northeastern University

'One of the book's most notable strengths is its creative and potentially very useful model.' Ronald J. Granieri, Temple University

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