Prime ministers and party governments in Central and Eastern Europe

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書誌事項

Prime ministers and party governments in Central and Eastern Europe

edited by Florian Grotz and Marko Kukec

Routledge, 2024

  • : hardcover

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注記

Includes bibliographical references and index

内容説明・目次

内容説明

This book focuses on Prime Ministers (PMs) in the post-communist democracies of Central and Eastern Europe (CEE). It shows how the survival of PMs in chief executive office depends on their interrelations with other actors in three different arenas. The first arena encompasses the linkages between PMs and their parties. In this respect, being a party leader is a major power resource for PMs to retain office even under critical circumstances. At the heart of the second arena is the PMs' relationship to other parliamentary parties. In this regard, the high fragmentation and fluidity of many post-communist party systems pose enormous challenges for PMs to secure constant parliamentary support. In the third arena, PMs are confronted with state presidents. Given their relatively strong powers in most CEE countries, presidents may use their constitutional powers to interfere in the political domain of PMs and thus jeopardise the stability of party governments. The book offers new evidence on these relationships from case studies and a broader comparative perspective. This volume will be of great use to students and researchers interested in comparative politics and government, European studies as well as political leadership. The chapters in this book were originally published as a special issue of East European Politics and are accompanied by a revised introduction and a new conclusion.

目次

Introduction: The Survival of Prime Ministers in Central and Eastern European Party Governments 1. Coping with the new party challenge: patterns of prime ministerial survival in Croatia and Slovenia 2. Juggling friends and foes: Prime Minister Borissov's surprise survival in Bulgaria 3. Prime ministers in minority governments: the case of Hungary 4. Prime ministers, presidents and ministerial selection in Lithuania 5. Puppets of the president? Prime ministers in post-communist Romania Conclusion: Weak Chief Executives? Post-Communist Prime Ministers between their Parties, Parliaments and Presidents

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