The main focus of this Essay is the potential dynamic tension in the Czech dual executive power. The Czech presidency, presently occupied by the former dissident Vaclav Havel, is commonly perceived in the Czech Republic as a weak presidency. If it is true that President Havel\u27s office can justifiably be described as weak, is this due to Constitutional restraints on the presidency, or is it a function of the personality of the current occupant of the presidency? This Essay also discusses the implications of the November 15-16, 1996 Senate elections on the Czech democracy
Abstract This article begins with a brief overview of the characteristics of illiberal democracy pr...
Primary aim of this thesis is to describe the effects of direct elections on the nature of the polit...
The purpose of this Article is to review the constitutional traditions of the East-Central European ...
The main focus of this Essay is the potential dynamic tension in the Czech dual executive power. The...
This essay is a part of a broader study entitled Post-communist Constitution-making: Confessions of...
The Czech Republic adopted a new constitution in 1992, following the division of Czechoslovakia into...
The following essay is based on the book, Czecho/Slovakia: Ethnic Conflict, Constitutional Fissure, ...
Václav Havel had two eventful terms as the first democratic president of the Czech Republic. The doc...
This paper analyzes the constitutional events in the summer of 2012 when Romania experienced the dee...
The form and stability of Czech governments: influence of party and electoral systemsThis article fo...
The article presents the political and intellectual silhouette of Václav Havel (1936–2011) – the las...
In the first part of the text, the author lists standard theoretical arguments used in the debates a...
Until 2012 the Czech Republic was almost unambiguously classified as a parliamentary regime. However...
The subject is the post-communist state, examined through an analysis of the break-up of Czechoslova...
The Czech Republic today belongs to the minority of European republics whose presidents are elected ...
Abstract This article begins with a brief overview of the characteristics of illiberal democracy pr...
Primary aim of this thesis is to describe the effects of direct elections on the nature of the polit...
The purpose of this Article is to review the constitutional traditions of the East-Central European ...
The main focus of this Essay is the potential dynamic tension in the Czech dual executive power. The...
This essay is a part of a broader study entitled Post-communist Constitution-making: Confessions of...
The Czech Republic adopted a new constitution in 1992, following the division of Czechoslovakia into...
The following essay is based on the book, Czecho/Slovakia: Ethnic Conflict, Constitutional Fissure, ...
Václav Havel had two eventful terms as the first democratic president of the Czech Republic. The doc...
This paper analyzes the constitutional events in the summer of 2012 when Romania experienced the dee...
The form and stability of Czech governments: influence of party and electoral systemsThis article fo...
The article presents the political and intellectual silhouette of Václav Havel (1936–2011) – the las...
In the first part of the text, the author lists standard theoretical arguments used in the debates a...
Until 2012 the Czech Republic was almost unambiguously classified as a parliamentary regime. However...
The subject is the post-communist state, examined through an analysis of the break-up of Czechoslova...
The Czech Republic today belongs to the minority of European republics whose presidents are elected ...
Abstract This article begins with a brief overview of the characteristics of illiberal democracy pr...
Primary aim of this thesis is to describe the effects of direct elections on the nature of the polit...
The purpose of this Article is to review the constitutional traditions of the East-Central European ...