Presidents, monarchs, and prime ministers : executive power sharing in the world
Author(s)
Bibliographic Information
Presidents, monarchs, and prime ministers : executive power sharing in the world
(Palgrave studies in presidential politics)
Palgrave Macmillan, c2022
Available at / 1 libraries
-
No Libraries matched.
- Remove all filters.
Note
Includes bibliographical references and index
Description and Table of Contents
Description
During the last three decades, there has been a growing interest in systems that combine elements of parliamentarism and presidentialism. Despite the fact that much attention has been directed towards the semi-presidential form of government in particular, it is evident that many aspects of regime forms remain unexplored. This book systematically categorises democratic political regimes with a separate head of state and government (including regimes with a monarch and prime minister, and president and PM) globally and over a long historical period 1850-2019. It analyses how regimes with a dual executive emerge and what trajectories they follow. It also explores the stability of these regimes across time and space. An important feature of this endeavour is to address actual powers of the head of state rather than constitutional provisions.
Table of Contents
Chapter 1. Introduction
1.1 The research task
1.1 A broad conception of dual executives
1.2 Mapping the dual executives 1850-2019
1.3 How dual executives emerge
1.4 How dual executives transform
1.5 How dual executives end
1.6 Outline of the book
1.7 Data and methods
1.8 Contribution to the field of research
Chapter 2. Classifying Political Regimes
2.1 Introduction
2.2 Classifying authoritarian regimes
2.3 Classifying democratic regimes
2.4 Conclusion: The difficult art of classifying regimes
Chapter 3. The Research Population
3.1 Separating democracies from autocracies
3.2 Separating dual executives from single executives
3.3 The selection of the head of state
3.4 The powers of the head of state
3.5 Dual executives 1850-2019
Chapter 4. How Dual Executives Emerge
4.1 Introduction
4.2 Previous regime form and regime choice
4.2.1 The monarchic legacy
4.2.2 The party based legacy
4.2.3 The legacy of other regimes
4.2.4 Operationalizing regime transformations
4.3 Previous regime form and introduction of dual executives - empirical patterns
4.4 Diffusion
4.4.1 The colonial heritage
4.4.2 Geographical proximity
4.5 Diffusion and introduction of dual executives - empirical patterns
4.5.1 Colonial heritage and regime choice
4.5.2 Spatial proximity and regime choice
4.6 The comprehensive picture
4.6.1 The interrelatedness of regime form and diffusion
4.6.2 Previous regime form, diffusion and dual executives - Multivariate findings
4.7 Discussion
Chapter 5. Patterns of Transformations in Dual Executives
5.1 Theoretical patterns of transformation
5.2 Empirical patterns of transformations
5.3 Multivariate patterns
5.3.1 Introduction control variables
5.3.2 Empirical patterns
5.4 Discussion
Chapter 6. How Dual Executives End
6.1 Introduction
6.2 When do we expect dual executives to die?
6.3 Selection mode, powers, and regime breakdown - empirical patterns
6.4 Multivariate patterns
6.5 Discussion
Chapter 7. Conclusion
7.1 Summary of findings
7.2 Lessons, limitations, and prospects for future research
by "Nielsen BookData"