PhD Review: The Brains Behind the Party. Varying and Evolving Roles of Political Party Think Tanks

Authors

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.54195/plc.26154

Keywords:

political parties, political advisors, think thanks, political staff

Abstract

Although political parties are considered powerful players in almost all Western democraties, until recently the ‘brains behind the party’ remained to a large extent a blind spot. By focusing on political party think thanks (PPTTs), Britt Vande Walle’s PhD helps closing this gap. PPTTs are (unlike other think thanks) formally linked to a political party, and (unlike political staffers) they transcend specific party segments and enjoy more autonomy.

This piece discusses how this topic was approached in Vande Walle’s PhD, it gives an overview of the main findings, it reflects on the contribution that is made to the literature, and formulates some suggestions for future research.

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References

Moens, P. (2021). Serving or undermining democracy? How political parties hold staffers accountable in Belgium and the Netherlands. PhD Ghent University. Faculty of Political and Social Sciences, Ghent.

Vande Walle, B. (2024). The brains behind the party: Varying and evolving roles of political party think tanks. PhD KU Leuven. Faculty of Social Sciences, Leuven.

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Published

2026-03-04

Issue

Section

PhD Review & Summary

How to Cite

Wauters, B. (2026). PhD Review: The Brains Behind the Party. Varying and Evolving Roles of Political Party Think Tanks. Politics of the Low Countries, 8(1). https://doi.org/10.54195/plc.26154