Some European constitutions give cabinets great discretion to manage their own demise, whereas others limit their choices and insert the head of state into decisions about government termination. In this article, we map the tremendous variation in the constitutional rules that govern cabinet termination and test existing expectations about its effects on a government's survival and mode of termination. In doing so, we use the most extensive government survival data set available to date, the first to include East and West European governments. Our results demonstrate that constitutional constraints on governments and presidential influence on cabinet termination are much more common than has previously been understood and have powerful effe...
This paper analyses the institutions associated with government termination in parliamentary systems...
The survival of governments ultimately depends on the survival of its components. These components a...
The thesis attempts to explore the relationship between government change anddemocratic breakdown, b...
As semi-presidentialism has become increasingly common in European democracies, so have the debates ...
In this article, we examine the variation in the institutional powers granted to president to termin...
While the existence of pre-electoral coalitions fundamentally modifies the bargaining environment in...
Based on a new comparative data set on coalition governance in 15 European parliamentary and semi-pr...
In this article, we examine the variation in the institutional powers granted to president to termin...
This thesis is rooted in the research tradition known as coalition politics, where governments, poli...
Thesis (Ph. D.)--University of Rochester. Dept. of Political Science, 2008.In most European democrac...
A country’s form of government has important economic and political consequences, but the de-termina...
Government instability (cabinet duration) is an important feature of parliamentary democracy. Over t...
This chapter is part of a larger research project on coalition governance and seeks to provide an ac...
The literature on government coalitions uses a common definition of when governments terminate and n...
Government instability (cabinet duration) is an important feature of parliamentary democracy. Over t...
This paper analyses the institutions associated with government termination in parliamentary systems...
The survival of governments ultimately depends on the survival of its components. These components a...
The thesis attempts to explore the relationship between government change anddemocratic breakdown, b...
As semi-presidentialism has become increasingly common in European democracies, so have the debates ...
In this article, we examine the variation in the institutional powers granted to president to termin...
While the existence of pre-electoral coalitions fundamentally modifies the bargaining environment in...
Based on a new comparative data set on coalition governance in 15 European parliamentary and semi-pr...
In this article, we examine the variation in the institutional powers granted to president to termin...
This thesis is rooted in the research tradition known as coalition politics, where governments, poli...
Thesis (Ph. D.)--University of Rochester. Dept. of Political Science, 2008.In most European democrac...
A country’s form of government has important economic and political consequences, but the de-termina...
Government instability (cabinet duration) is an important feature of parliamentary democracy. Over t...
This chapter is part of a larger research project on coalition governance and seeks to provide an ac...
The literature on government coalitions uses a common definition of when governments terminate and n...
Government instability (cabinet duration) is an important feature of parliamentary democracy. Over t...
This paper analyses the institutions associated with government termination in parliamentary systems...
The survival of governments ultimately depends on the survival of its components. These components a...
The thesis attempts to explore the relationship between government change anddemocratic breakdown, b...