Skip to main content

Lund University Publications

LUND UNIVERSITY LIBRARIES

La professionnalisation des partis politiques en Belgique : vers l’intégration de la dimension de genre

Erzeel, Silvia and Vandeleene, Audrey LU (2017) p.191-212
Abstract
Political parties throughout Europe are witnessing a significant professionalization of their daily functioning. Professionalization refers to an institutional process “by which professionals become more central to an organization, in this case a party” (Webb & Kolodny 2006: 338). The centrality of professionals is most obvious in parties’ reliance on an expanding body of professional staff members and experts with specialized skills (a.o. marketing professionals, consultants, spin-doctors and public relations experts) performing traditional party functions and supporting the leadership in the management of the party. These professionals replace – or at least complement – member-volunteers and party bureaucrats in the party apparatus... (More)
Political parties throughout Europe are witnessing a significant professionalization of their daily functioning. Professionalization refers to an institutional process “by which professionals become more central to an organization, in this case a party” (Webb & Kolodny 2006: 338). The centrality of professionals is most obvious in parties’ reliance on an expanding body of professional staff members and experts with specialized skills (a.o. marketing professionals, consultants, spin-doctors and public relations experts) performing traditional party functions and supporting the leadership in the management of the party. These professionals replace – or at least complement – member-volunteers and party bureaucrats in the party apparatus (Norris 2000).
Although party professionalization is a phenomenon that has received considerable academic attention, research on the professionalization of Belgian political parties remains scarce. In this paper, we will study –in an explorative way– to what extent and how professionalization has taken/is taking place in the Belgian parties, focusing on gender equality. On the one hand, we will ‘map’ the presence of “gender professionals” in Belgian parties: who are they, what are their main tasks, to what extent is their presence institutionalized in the party and how has this changed over time? On the other hand, we will reflect on the consequences of the presence of “gender professionals” for the internal dynamics and power relations within parties.
We conduct an in-depth case study of one particular policy domain, but we will reflect on the broader implications for processes of party professionalization in other domains as well. We explore the professionalization of gender equality in 11 Belgian parties based on new and original data (including document analysis and interviews) gathered by the authors in 2006 and 2014. The results show that party professionalization is overall limited. Although parties have included gender experts in their organization (for instance in study centres or through intra-party women’s groups), this gender expertise is often not structurally embedded: in many parties in Belgium its existence is not recognized by any formal rules and its functioning is not supported by any paid administrative staff. (Less)
Please use this url to cite or link to this publication:
author
and
organization
alternative title
The professionalization of political parties in Belgium: the case of gender equality
publishing date
type
Chapter in Book/Report/Conference proceeding
publication status
published
subject
host publication
La professionnalisation des luttes pour l’égalité : Genre et féminisme
editor
Meier, Petra and Paternotte, David
pages
191 - 212
publisher
Academia-L’Harmattan
language
French
LU publication?
yes
id
7869f51c-4e8d-4651-8ee5-cae1af388720
date added to LUP
2018-04-10 06:27:24
date last changed
2018-11-21 21:39:12
@inbook{7869f51c-4e8d-4651-8ee5-cae1af388720,
  abstract     = {{Political parties throughout Europe are witnessing a significant professionalization of their daily functioning. Professionalization refers to an institutional process “by which professionals become more central to an organization, in this case a party” (Webb &amp; Kolodny 2006: 338). The centrality of professionals is most obvious in parties’ reliance on an expanding body of professional staff members and experts with specialized skills (a.o. marketing professionals, consultants, spin-doctors and public relations experts) performing traditional party functions and supporting the leadership in the management of the party. These professionals replace – or at least complement – member-volunteers and party bureaucrats in the party apparatus (Norris 2000).<br>
Although party professionalization is a phenomenon that has received considerable academic attention, research on the professionalization of Belgian political parties remains scarce. In this paper, we will study –in an explorative way– to what extent and how professionalization has taken/is taking place in the Belgian parties, focusing on gender equality. On the one hand, we will ‘map’ the presence of “gender professionals” in Belgian parties: who are they, what are their main tasks, to what extent is their presence institutionalized in the party and how has this changed over time? On the other hand, we will reflect on the consequences of the presence of “gender professionals” for the internal dynamics and power relations within parties. <br>
We conduct an in-depth case study of one particular policy domain, but we will reflect on the broader implications for processes of party professionalization in other domains as well. We explore the professionalization of gender equality in 11 Belgian parties based on new and original data (including document analysis and interviews) gathered by the authors in 2006 and 2014. The results show that party professionalization is overall limited. Although parties have included gender experts in their organization (for instance in study centres or through intra-party women’s groups), this gender expertise is often not structurally embedded: in many parties in Belgium its existence is not recognized by any formal rules and its functioning is not supported by any paid administrative staff.}},
  author       = {{Erzeel, Silvia and Vandeleene, Audrey}},
  booktitle    = {{La professionnalisation des luttes pour l’égalité : Genre et féminisme}},
  editor       = {{Meier, Petra and Paternotte, David}},
  language     = {{fre}},
  pages        = {{191--212}},
  publisher    = {{Academia-L’Harmattan}},
  title        = {{La professionnalisation des partis politiques en Belgique : vers l’intégration de la dimension de genre}},
  year         = {{2017}},
}