This article seeks to explain to what extent government composition changes in cabinet formations: it examines why some party systems tend to see wholesale turn-over (where all government parties were previously in opposition) and others only see partial turn-over (where some of the government parties were previously in government). This distinction has been described by many prominent political scientists. Yet there is limited research into the underlying causes. This article examines the importance of both party system characteristics and conditions specific to the cabinet formation: it finds that specifically the interaction between number of parties in a party system and their distribution over the political space matters for the level ...
Westminster-derived parliamentary systems are typically associated with two party systems and single...
The article describes the analysis of the modern British party system in the age of changes and tran...
In spite of large electoral changes since the 1990s, party composition of government changes less an...
This article seeks to explain to what extent government composition changes in cabinet formations: i...
Research on government formation in parliamentary democracies has presented contradicting evidence o...
The divide between government and opposition is clearly visible in the way members of parliament vot...
Previous research claims that the number of parties affects the representation of social cleavages i...
Previous research claims that the number of parties affects the representation of social cleavages i...
This article aims at studying the effect of the state of the economy and the characteristics of the ...
This article aims to explain longitudinal and cross-sectional variation in regional government compo...
The Quality of Government (QoG) research program has to date justified the importance of political c...
This note helps to explain how cabinet-level concentration of power is constrained by party level co...
In this article we examine the emerging party systems of the devolved environments, with an eye towa...
The divide between government and opposition is clearly visible in the way members of parliament vot...
Westminster-derived parliamentary systems are typically associated with two party systems and single...
The article describes the analysis of the modern British party system in the age of changes and tran...
In spite of large electoral changes since the 1990s, party composition of government changes less an...
This article seeks to explain to what extent government composition changes in cabinet formations: i...
Research on government formation in parliamentary democracies has presented contradicting evidence o...
The divide between government and opposition is clearly visible in the way members of parliament vot...
Previous research claims that the number of parties affects the representation of social cleavages i...
Previous research claims that the number of parties affects the representation of social cleavages i...
This article aims at studying the effect of the state of the economy and the characteristics of the ...
This article aims to explain longitudinal and cross-sectional variation in regional government compo...
The Quality of Government (QoG) research program has to date justified the importance of political c...
This note helps to explain how cabinet-level concentration of power is constrained by party level co...
In this article we examine the emerging party systems of the devolved environments, with an eye towa...
The divide between government and opposition is clearly visible in the way members of parliament vot...
Westminster-derived parliamentary systems are typically associated with two party systems and single...
The article describes the analysis of the modern British party system in the age of changes and tran...
In spite of large electoral changes since the 1990s, party composition of government changes less an...