This article outlines the logic and consequences of the classical theory of electoral governance. By empowering the executive with the administration of elections and the legislature with the certification of the vote tally, the theory expected elected officials to generate widely acceptable election results. This article argues that the classical theory breaks down when the same party controls the executive and the legislature. Developments in several presidential systems offer tentative support for its central hypothesis. Only when parties delegated election governance to an autonomous court system did election conflicts stop promoting political instability. Comparisons between US and Latin American separation of power systems also sugges...
Democratic systems have regular elections, which supposes the existence of one or more organisms in ...
Why do democracies agree with contested illiberal regimes on the creation of regional institutions f...
This dissertation seeks to examine why democratic systems and electoral competition can sometimes fa...
ABSTRACT. This article outlines the logic and consequences of the classical theory of electoral gove...
In this article, I propose to analyze party system institutionalization in multiparty presidential c...
Attempts to respond to “democratic deficits ” in modern constitutional republics must contend with t...
Over the past 25 years, the “third wave ” of global democratization has washed about 80 countries to...
Defence date: 28 June 2012Examining Board: Professor Mark Franklin (EUI Supervisor); Professor Phil...
This article reviews the electoral accountability dimension as a constitutive mechanism of Paraguaya...
This article revisits Arend Lijphart's (1990) re-analysis of Douglas Rae's The Political Consequence...
Examining Board: Professor Fabrizio Bernardi, EUI Professor Mark N. Franklin, Massachusetts Institu...
This research addresses the conditions necessary for the survival of democratic presidential systems...
This paper examines the impact of two models of constitutional design on Latin American politics. It...
This article explains why dissatisfaction with the performance of individual politicians in new demo...
This article examines the interaction between the rules governing presidential elections and multipa...
Democratic systems have regular elections, which supposes the existence of one or more organisms in ...
Why do democracies agree with contested illiberal regimes on the creation of regional institutions f...
This dissertation seeks to examine why democratic systems and electoral competition can sometimes fa...
ABSTRACT. This article outlines the logic and consequences of the classical theory of electoral gove...
In this article, I propose to analyze party system institutionalization in multiparty presidential c...
Attempts to respond to “democratic deficits ” in modern constitutional republics must contend with t...
Over the past 25 years, the “third wave ” of global democratization has washed about 80 countries to...
Defence date: 28 June 2012Examining Board: Professor Mark Franklin (EUI Supervisor); Professor Phil...
This article reviews the electoral accountability dimension as a constitutive mechanism of Paraguaya...
This article revisits Arend Lijphart's (1990) re-analysis of Douglas Rae's The Political Consequence...
Examining Board: Professor Fabrizio Bernardi, EUI Professor Mark N. Franklin, Massachusetts Institu...
This research addresses the conditions necessary for the survival of democratic presidential systems...
This paper examines the impact of two models of constitutional design on Latin American politics. It...
This article explains why dissatisfaction with the performance of individual politicians in new demo...
This article examines the interaction between the rules governing presidential elections and multipa...
Democratic systems have regular elections, which supposes the existence of one or more organisms in ...
Why do democracies agree with contested illiberal regimes on the creation of regional institutions f...
This dissertation seeks to examine why democratic systems and electoral competition can sometimes fa...