This article challenges a key part of the conventional view of coalitions in presidential systems that sees them as short-lived and ad hoc. The author shows instead that there is wide variation in the durability of governing coali-tions across these regimes. She develops a theory of the incentives of parties to participate in the government and the circumstances under which scholars might expect to see the existing governing coalition break down. The author draws on data from 121 cabinets in 12 Latin American countries between the late 1980s and the mid-2000s to show that the dissolution of the cabinet is more likely when the president places less value on coalition building as a policy-making strategy and when parties find it costly to par...
While the opposition is clearly defined in a parliamentary system, the definition is murky in multip...
As semi-presidentialism has become increasingly common in European democracies, so have the debates ...
Much of the recent analysis of presidentialism has been based on the assumption that executive-legis...
This article challenges a key part of the conventional view of coalitions in presidential systems th...
Research on executive-legislative relations in presidential systems have emphasized how presidents u...
"This article proposes a set of arguments about the strategic use of cabinet appointments by executi...
Cabinet coalitions are central to the functioning of Latin American presidential systems. However, t...
This paper focuses on the process of coalition formation in presidential systems. It shows that part...
This article proposes a set of arguments about the strategic use of cabinet appointments by executiv...
<div><p>Presidential legislative majorities under bicameral congresses have seldom been considered i...
This article examines why and when presidents remove members of the cabinet in response to critical ...
This paper focuses on the process of coalition formation in presidential systems. It shows that part...
This paper focuses on the coalition formation process in presidential systems. It shows that institu...
All presidential cabinets formed in Brazil between 1985 and 1998 included politicians from more than...
This paper focuses on the process of coalition formation in presidential systems. It shows that part...
While the opposition is clearly defined in a parliamentary system, the definition is murky in multip...
As semi-presidentialism has become increasingly common in European democracies, so have the debates ...
Much of the recent analysis of presidentialism has been based on the assumption that executive-legis...
This article challenges a key part of the conventional view of coalitions in presidential systems th...
Research on executive-legislative relations in presidential systems have emphasized how presidents u...
"This article proposes a set of arguments about the strategic use of cabinet appointments by executi...
Cabinet coalitions are central to the functioning of Latin American presidential systems. However, t...
This paper focuses on the process of coalition formation in presidential systems. It shows that part...
This article proposes a set of arguments about the strategic use of cabinet appointments by executiv...
<div><p>Presidential legislative majorities under bicameral congresses have seldom been considered i...
This article examines why and when presidents remove members of the cabinet in response to critical ...
This paper focuses on the process of coalition formation in presidential systems. It shows that part...
This paper focuses on the coalition formation process in presidential systems. It shows that institu...
All presidential cabinets formed in Brazil between 1985 and 1998 included politicians from more than...
This paper focuses on the process of coalition formation in presidential systems. It shows that part...
While the opposition is clearly defined in a parliamentary system, the definition is murky in multip...
As semi-presidentialism has become increasingly common in European democracies, so have the debates ...
Much of the recent analysis of presidentialism has been based on the assumption that executive-legis...