This article is about how political regimes should generally be classified, and how Latin American regimes should be classified for the 1945-99 period. We make five general claims about regime classification. First, regime classification should rest on sound concepts and definitions. Second, it should be based on explicit and sensible coding and aggregation rules. Third, it necessarily involves some subjective judgments. Fourth, the debate about dichotomous versus continuous measures of democracy creates a false dilemma. Neither democratic theory, nor coding requirements, nor the reality underlying democratic practice compel either a dichotomous or a continuous approach in all cases. Fifth, dichotomous measures of democracy fail to...
Why do democracies survive or break down? In this paper, it returns to this classic question with an...
<div><p>Traditionally, political scientists define political institutions deductively. This approach...
Traditionally, political scientists define political institutions deductively. This approach may pre...
This article is about how political regimes should generally be classified, and how Latin American r...
This article is about how political regimes should generally be classified, and how Latin American r...
This paper is about two related subjects: how to classify political regimes in general, and how Lati...
Classifying political regimes has never been more difficult. Most contemporary regimes hold de-jure ...
In the past three decades, debates in Latin American political theory have shifted from struggles ov...
This book presents a new theory for why political regimes emerge, and why they subsequently survive ...
We address the strengths and weaknesses of the main available measures of political regime and exten...
This book investigates the successes and failures in consolidating those democratic regimes that eme...
The study presents an overview of the ways in which the process of establishing and maintaining demo...
In this paper, I create a new measure of regime type and examine the implication that using such a m...
After World War II the political world was shaped by the ideological bipolarity of capitalism and so...
Democracy reached its peak in 2005, when 46 per cent of states in the world were ranked as “Free” wh...
Why do democracies survive or break down? In this paper, it returns to this classic question with an...
<div><p>Traditionally, political scientists define political institutions deductively. This approach...
Traditionally, political scientists define political institutions deductively. This approach may pre...
This article is about how political regimes should generally be classified, and how Latin American r...
This article is about how political regimes should generally be classified, and how Latin American r...
This paper is about two related subjects: how to classify political regimes in general, and how Lati...
Classifying political regimes has never been more difficult. Most contemporary regimes hold de-jure ...
In the past three decades, debates in Latin American political theory have shifted from struggles ov...
This book presents a new theory for why political regimes emerge, and why they subsequently survive ...
We address the strengths and weaknesses of the main available measures of political regime and exten...
This book investigates the successes and failures in consolidating those democratic regimes that eme...
The study presents an overview of the ways in which the process of establishing and maintaining demo...
In this paper, I create a new measure of regime type and examine the implication that using such a m...
After World War II the political world was shaped by the ideological bipolarity of capitalism and so...
Democracy reached its peak in 2005, when 46 per cent of states in the world were ranked as “Free” wh...
Why do democracies survive or break down? In this paper, it returns to this classic question with an...
<div><p>Traditionally, political scientists define political institutions deductively. This approach...
Traditionally, political scientists define political institutions deductively. This approach may pre...