Current theories on institutional change tend to interpret it either as the result of long-term gradual trends, or of disrupting shocks following periods of punctuated equilibrium. Less is known about the moments in which change is more frequent. Focusing on the short-term determinants of reforms of core democratic rules in consolidated democracies, the article shows that proximate shifts in the electoral arena have a distinctive impact on the number of institutional reforms that are adopted in a legislature. Using the empirical and theoretical findings of the literature on electoral reform, the article develops a model tested in statistical analyses aggregating a large sample of institutional reforms in Western European democracies between...
Electoral systems are commonly treated as exogenous determinants of political party systems, yet our...
Electoral systems are commonly treated as exogenous determinants of political party systems, yet our...
Electoral systems are commonly treated as exogenous determinants of political party systems, yet our...
International audienceCurrent theories on institutional change tend to interpret it either as the re...
International audienceCurrent theories on institutional change tend to interpret it either as the re...
Electoral systems have an enormous importance on how political power is distributed, on governabilit...
Recent elections in Europe have shown that a context of increasing citizen distrust towards democrat...
As the “Short Twentieth Century” came to an end, more and more democracies seriously considered the ...
Examining Board: Professor Fabrizio Bernardi, EUI Professor Mark N. Franklin, Massachusetts Institu...
As the “Short Twentieth Century” came to an end, more and more democracies seriously considered the ...
Since the beginning of the 2008 economic crisis, we have seen the emergence of important debates on ...
When, why, and how are democratic institutions reformed? This is the broad question guiding this res...
When, why, and how are democratic institutions reformed? This is the broad question guiding this res...
Examining Board: Professor Fabrizio Bernardi, EUI Professor Mark N. Franklin, Massachusetts Institu...
Examining Board: Professor Fabrizio Bernardi, EUI Professor Mark N. Franklin, Massachusetts Institu...
Electoral systems are commonly treated as exogenous determinants of political party systems, yet our...
Electoral systems are commonly treated as exogenous determinants of political party systems, yet our...
Electoral systems are commonly treated as exogenous determinants of political party systems, yet our...
International audienceCurrent theories on institutional change tend to interpret it either as the re...
International audienceCurrent theories on institutional change tend to interpret it either as the re...
Electoral systems have an enormous importance on how political power is distributed, on governabilit...
Recent elections in Europe have shown that a context of increasing citizen distrust towards democrat...
As the “Short Twentieth Century” came to an end, more and more democracies seriously considered the ...
Examining Board: Professor Fabrizio Bernardi, EUI Professor Mark N. Franklin, Massachusetts Institu...
As the “Short Twentieth Century” came to an end, more and more democracies seriously considered the ...
Since the beginning of the 2008 economic crisis, we have seen the emergence of important debates on ...
When, why, and how are democratic institutions reformed? This is the broad question guiding this res...
When, why, and how are democratic institutions reformed? This is the broad question guiding this res...
Examining Board: Professor Fabrizio Bernardi, EUI Professor Mark N. Franklin, Massachusetts Institu...
Examining Board: Professor Fabrizio Bernardi, EUI Professor Mark N. Franklin, Massachusetts Institu...
Electoral systems are commonly treated as exogenous determinants of political party systems, yet our...
Electoral systems are commonly treated as exogenous determinants of political party systems, yet our...
Electoral systems are commonly treated as exogenous determinants of political party systems, yet our...