My research on this area focuses on the youth wings of political parties. Youth wings fulfil vital functions for parties, including recruiting, socialising and training young people for politics. They are also a key part of the pipeline to elected office. Until recently, however, party scholars had largely ignored them.
With my colleagues from the YOUMEM project, we therefore conducted the largest ever survey of youth wing party members, covering 12 centre-left and centre-right youth wings in 6 countries. Within this project, my work specifically looks at women’s involvement.
In addition to mainstream youth wings, I also study those of populist radical right (PRR) parties. I have co-authored a book manuscript on the topic which shows that youth wings matter for the present and the future of political parties in general, and PRR parties in particular.
As for the next steps, with my Griffith colleagues Ferran Martinez i Coma and Duncan McDonnell, we plan to look at the political participation of Generation-Z youth – a cohort of young people whose political behaviour and preferences appear distinct from those of previous generations.
Publications
McDonnell, D., Ammassari, S., Werner, A., Bolin, N., Valbruzzi, M., Ferrinho Lopes, H., Heinisch, R., Jungar, A.-C., & Wegscheider, C. (2025). Young radicals, moderates, and aligned: Ideological congruence and incongruence in party youth wings. European Journal of Political Research. Advance online publication. [Link] [PDF]
- Featured in The Australian, ‘Progressive party youth divisions more radical than conservatives’.
Ammassari, S., Martinez i Coma, F., & McDonnell, D. (2025). Young voters, abstainers, and unregistered: Generation Z turnout in a compulsory system. Political Studies. Advance online publication. [Link] [PDF]
- Featured in The Australian, ‘Almost half of young Australians vote because they’re scared of a fine’.
McDonnell, D., Ammassari, S., Valbruzzi, M., Bolin, N., Werner, A., Heinisch, R., Jungar, A.-C., & Wegscheider, C. (2024). Inside party youth wings: The YOUMEM project. Party Politics. Advance online publication. [Link] [PDF]
Ammassari, S., McDonnell, D., & Valbruzzi, M. (2023). It’s about the type of career: The political ambition gender gap among youth wing members. European Journal of Political Research, 62(4), 1054-1077. [Link] [PDF]
Book manuscript
McDonnell, D., Ammassari, S., Jungar, A.-C., Jupskås, A. R., & Mudde, C. Youth wings of the populist radical right. Forthcoming with Oxford University Press.
Abstract
Many of today’s most prominent populist radical right (PRR) leaders in Europe came through their party’s youth wings. Yet we know little about these organisations and how they and their members support their parties. This book, which is not only the first to examine PRR youth wings but is the first in English to look at youth wings of any ideological type, focuses on their structures and agents. Specifically, it considers their organisational features, their relationships with the senior party, their international networks, and their leaders and grassroots members. Covering 10 PRR youth wings from across Europe, and based on extensive interviews, survey data, and document analysis, it finds that youth wings are not merely peripheral future-oriented entities but are central and influential components of their parties in the here and now. The book thus offers a unique window on how youth wings are both supporting the PRR today and helping build the PRR of tomorrow.
Working papers
Seeberg, H. B., McDonnell, D., Ammassari, S., Bolin, N., Heinisch, R., Jungar, A.-C., Valbruzzi, M., Wegscheider, C., & Werner, A. The personal efficacy of party youth wing members. Under review.
Abstract
Young people increasingly withdraw from party politics. However, some still join parties because they believe they can influence them to achieve change. We examine this personal efficacy among contemporary youth wing members and ask: what are the individual and party-level factors that influence their personal efficacy? To do so, we combine the “Political Party Database Base” with the largest original survey of youth wing members conducted, covering ~3,600 members of twelve party youth wings in six democracies. We find that young people who are more active are more efficacious and that efficacy drops after joining but eventually increases for members that stay longer. We also find that greater opportunities for the youth wing to be heard by its party fosters more efficacious youth wing members. Our results show that parties which incentivise participation and integrate their youth wings into senior party increase their members’ personal efficacy and nurtures democratic citizens.
Bolin, N., McDonnell, D., Ammassari, S., Heinisch, R., Jungar, A.-C. Valbruzzi, M., Wegscheider, C., & Werner, A. The added value of youth wings: Do they nurture the members their parties want? Under review.
Abstract
Political parties expect their youth wings to recruit and socialize young members into the norms and values of the senior party. However, exposure to youth wings may not necessarily go hand-in-hand with greater attachment to the senior party. This study examines whether youth wings nurture the members parties want using survey data from over 5,000 members of 12 youth wings in six countries. We assess whether length and degree of participation in youth wings are associated with greater ideological alignment and long-term party engagement. The results show that active members are somewhat more ideologically aligned and inclined to remain in the senior party, while passive members display the opposite trend. However, length of membership is associated with reduced aspirations among all for intra-party and public office. Our findings thus indicate that the added value of youth wings as future-oriented socialization vehicles for parties is less than generally assumed.
Ammassari, S., McDonnell, D., Bolin, N., Werner, A., Valbruzzi, M., Wegscheider, C., Heinisch, R., & Jungar, A.-C. Forces of renovation: How youth wings can foster efficacy and ambition among young women. Under review.
Abstract
Party youth wings are a vital pipeline to power in parliamentary democracies, but have been overlooked by gender and politics scholars. We investigate the political socialization that youth wings offer their women members, focusing on gendered trends as regards two key political attitudes. We ask: Do women and men in youth wings differ in their acquisition of personal efficacy and electoral ambition? Using original survey data from over 3,100 youth wing members in Australia, Austria, Germany, Italy, Spain and Sweden, we find that women are more likely than men to report increased desire to influence party policy and stand as candidates – the latter especially in center-right youth wings. Moreover, the more exposed members are to the youth wing, the larger the gender gaps in the acquisition of efficacy and ambition. Our results suggest that, insofar as women’s political socialization is concerned, youth wings can be forces of renovation within their parties.
Work in progress
Ammassari, S., McDonnell, D., Werner, A., Heinisch, R., Valbruzzi, M., & Wegscheider, C. Why young women and men join political parties: The mediating role of party-affiliated personal ties.
Abstract
Do young women and men vary in their reasons for joining political parties, and if so, why? To investigate this, we theorize the following: first, women will be more attracted by social incentives and men by material ones; second, before signing up, women will have more party-affiliated personal ties (i.e. family and friends) than men; and third, these ties will mediate the gender gap in incentives. Drawing on original survey data from over 3,400 party youth wing members of the main center-left and center-right parties in Australia, Austria, Germany, Italy and Spain, we find strong support for our argument. Our results show that, already in this early but crucial part of the pipeline to power, the incentives for getting involved in political parties are gendered. Notably, the young women who join are more likely to have party-affiliated personal ties than men, indicating that such resources are particularly valuable to them in overcoming the disadvantages they face when entering politics. If parties are interested in recruiting more young women, they should therefore emphasize the social rewards of membership in their recruitment campaigns.