The previous chapter uncovered important differences between decision-making structures across the 11 processes investigated by this study. As we have noted, both historically and in much contemporary literature, the Swiss political system has been described as highly consensual. And yet, when we focus on differences between decision-making structures across different policy domains, important elements appear that point toward a more conflictual style of decision-making. Both when there is a power balance between coalitions and in the presence of a dominant coalition, coalition interactions are conflictual in the majority of cases. Based on the descriptive account of these differences in Chapter 4, the present chapter studies the conditions...
This paper analyses which conflict dimensions that structure politics in the Council of the European...
A central assumption of deliberative theory is that political preferences are endogenous to decision...
Recent contributions have highlighted the stability of consensus, corporatism and consociationalism ...
In modern democratic systems, usually no single collective actor is able to decisively influence pol...
Actors with joint beliefs in a decision-making process form coalitions in order to translate their g...
This paper studies the relation between coalition structures in policy processes and policy change. ...
Power is one of the most fundamental concepts in political science, and it is a crucial aspect of de...
This paper attempts to explain decision-making structures in Swiss politics. Decision-making structu...
Close studies of governmental decisions in democracies commonly divide the process into two stages. ...
Institutions matter in policy-making. Political systems shape power structures and interac- tion pat...
This in-depth study of the decision-making processes of the early 2000s shows that the Swiss consens...
This article presents a model of decision making and introduces a new theoretical variable to the li...
Scholars of coalition politics have increasingly begun to focus on conflict within coalitions. Here ...
Consensus democracies like Switzerland are generally known to have a low innovation capacity (Lijpha...
For several decades, comparative politics has treated the Swiss political system as the prime exampl...
This paper analyses which conflict dimensions that structure politics in the Council of the European...
A central assumption of deliberative theory is that political preferences are endogenous to decision...
Recent contributions have highlighted the stability of consensus, corporatism and consociationalism ...
In modern democratic systems, usually no single collective actor is able to decisively influence pol...
Actors with joint beliefs in a decision-making process form coalitions in order to translate their g...
This paper studies the relation between coalition structures in policy processes and policy change. ...
Power is one of the most fundamental concepts in political science, and it is a crucial aspect of de...
This paper attempts to explain decision-making structures in Swiss politics. Decision-making structu...
Close studies of governmental decisions in democracies commonly divide the process into two stages. ...
Institutions matter in policy-making. Political systems shape power structures and interac- tion pat...
This in-depth study of the decision-making processes of the early 2000s shows that the Swiss consens...
This article presents a model of decision making and introduces a new theoretical variable to the li...
Scholars of coalition politics have increasingly begun to focus on conflict within coalitions. Here ...
Consensus democracies like Switzerland are generally known to have a low innovation capacity (Lijpha...
For several decades, comparative politics has treated the Swiss political system as the prime exampl...
This paper analyses which conflict dimensions that structure politics in the Council of the European...
A central assumption of deliberative theory is that political preferences are endogenous to decision...
Recent contributions have highlighted the stability of consensus, corporatism and consociationalism ...