Making and Breaking Governments offers a theoretical argument about
how parliamentary parties form governments, deriving from the
political and social context of such government formation its generic
sequential process. Based on their policy preferences, and their
beliefs about what policies will be forthcoming from different
conceivable governments, parties behave strategically in the game in
which government portfolios are allocated. The authors construct a
mathematical model of allocation of ministerial portfolios, formulated
as a noncooperative game, and derive equilibria. They also derive a
number of empirical hypotheses about outcomes of this game, which they
then test with data drawn from most of the postwar European
parliamentary democracies. The book concludes with a number of
observations about departmentalistic tendencies and centripetal forces
in parliamentary regimes.
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Cabinets and Legislatures in Parliamentary Democracies
Product details
ISBN
9780511882074
Published
2013
Edition
1. edition
Publisher
Cambridge University Press
Language
Product language
Engelsk
Format
Product format
Digital bok
Author