Despite the significant attention devoted to their birth and death, the day-to-day operation of coalition government remains understudied. This article addresses this lacuna, and sheds light on the dynamics of coalition governance by examining the interplay between macro-level institutions, meso-level values and micro-level practices. Focusing on the Conservative-Liberal Democrat Coalition that governed the United Kingdom between 2010-15, this analysis reveals the extent to which the everyday practice of coalition governance is flexible, contingent, and proceeds through informal negotiation and accommodation. It also draws attention to the dilemmas faced by coalition actors in terms of reconciling competing loyalties and appeasing a wide...
Coalition theory is central to our understanding of the nexus between party system development, part...
Coalitions will probably become an increasingly important theme in European Union (EU) politics. The...
Coalition politics remains relatively unfamiliar to British politicians, despite the experience of t...
Despite the significant attention devoted to their birth and death, the day-to-day operation of coal...
The majority of the world's advanced industrial democracies are parliamentary systems, and in most o...
Can an upper chamber in a system accustomed to single-party government be used by political parties ...
© 2014 Taylor & Francis. Taking as its point of departure Matthews' (2011) ‘Constitutional stretchin...
The UK’s first coalition government during peacetime since 1945 ended with the electoral decimation ...
Why do political parties negotiate coalition agreements? Many coalition cabinets negotiate lengthy c...
"The British general election of May 2010 delivered the first coalition government since the Second ...
From Austria to New Zealand, coalition governments often pave the road to foreign policy. In Western...
Constitutional reform in the United Kingdom is a story frequently framed around the narratives of mi...
The Westminster model is recognized the world over as delivering strong, stable one-party government...
The central contention of this article is that coalition bargaining is permeated by the competing im...
The Conservative and Liberal Democrat government has already overturned decades of the conventional ...
Coalition theory is central to our understanding of the nexus between party system development, part...
Coalitions will probably become an increasingly important theme in European Union (EU) politics. The...
Coalition politics remains relatively unfamiliar to British politicians, despite the experience of t...
Despite the significant attention devoted to their birth and death, the day-to-day operation of coal...
The majority of the world's advanced industrial democracies are parliamentary systems, and in most o...
Can an upper chamber in a system accustomed to single-party government be used by political parties ...
© 2014 Taylor & Francis. Taking as its point of departure Matthews' (2011) ‘Constitutional stretchin...
The UK’s first coalition government during peacetime since 1945 ended with the electoral decimation ...
Why do political parties negotiate coalition agreements? Many coalition cabinets negotiate lengthy c...
"The British general election of May 2010 delivered the first coalition government since the Second ...
From Austria to New Zealand, coalition governments often pave the road to foreign policy. In Western...
Constitutional reform in the United Kingdom is a story frequently framed around the narratives of mi...
The Westminster model is recognized the world over as delivering strong, stable one-party government...
The central contention of this article is that coalition bargaining is permeated by the competing im...
The Conservative and Liberal Democrat government has already overturned decades of the conventional ...
Coalition theory is central to our understanding of the nexus between party system development, part...
Coalitions will probably become an increasingly important theme in European Union (EU) politics. The...
Coalition politics remains relatively unfamiliar to British politicians, despite the experience of t...