This chapter is part of a larger research project on coalition governance and seeks to provide an account of the dynamics of cabinet (and, in particular, coalition) durability in the interval between cabinet formation and termination. The chapter tests predictions about the covariation between relevant actors’ resources, their policy preferences, the institutional constraints they face and the risks posed by random events on the one hand and cabinet durability (the dependent variable) on the other. A number of predictions will be derived from the bargaining-theoretic framework outlined in the second chapter of this volume. The use of event-history analysis as a statistical method ensures that the dynamics of cabinet survival, modelled as an...
The literature on cabinet duration is split between two apparently irreconcilable positions. The att...
this paper we present a structural approach to the study of government formation in multi-party parl...
As semi-presidentialism has become increasingly common in European democracies, so have the debates ...
Based on a new comparative data set on coalition governance in 15 European parliamentary and semi-pr...
While the existence of pre-electoral coalitions fundamentally modifies the bargaining environment in...
This paper makes an empirical contribution to an emerging body of scholarship modelling coalition po...
This paper is part of a larger project in which we develop methods for estimating the causal effects...
In multiparty parliamentary democracies government coalitions frequently reshuffle the allocation of...
Some European constitutions give cabinets great discretion to manage their own demise, whereas other...
In this thesis, I study three aspects of the interaction between politics and economics in coalition...
In parliamentary democracies, elections distribute the seats in parliament, but who gets into govern...
This article develops a typology of parliamentary games on the basis of the combined presence or abs...
The research reported in this study started as an attempt to integrate two different traditions in t...
Why do some government formation periods end after a few days, while others last for several weeks o...
Increased levels of economic openness in the industrial democracies have heightened the potential fo...
The literature on cabinet duration is split between two apparently irreconcilable positions. The att...
this paper we present a structural approach to the study of government formation in multi-party parl...
As semi-presidentialism has become increasingly common in European democracies, so have the debates ...
Based on a new comparative data set on coalition governance in 15 European parliamentary and semi-pr...
While the existence of pre-electoral coalitions fundamentally modifies the bargaining environment in...
This paper makes an empirical contribution to an emerging body of scholarship modelling coalition po...
This paper is part of a larger project in which we develop methods for estimating the causal effects...
In multiparty parliamentary democracies government coalitions frequently reshuffle the allocation of...
Some European constitutions give cabinets great discretion to manage their own demise, whereas other...
In this thesis, I study three aspects of the interaction between politics and economics in coalition...
In parliamentary democracies, elections distribute the seats in parliament, but who gets into govern...
This article develops a typology of parliamentary games on the basis of the combined presence or abs...
The research reported in this study started as an attempt to integrate two different traditions in t...
Why do some government formation periods end after a few days, while others last for several weeks o...
Increased levels of economic openness in the industrial democracies have heightened the potential fo...
The literature on cabinet duration is split between two apparently irreconcilable positions. The att...
this paper we present a structural approach to the study of government formation in multi-party parl...
As semi-presidentialism has become increasingly common in European democracies, so have the debates ...