Government Survival in Parliamentary Democracies
Format:Paperback
Publisher:Cambridge University Press
Published:29th Jun '07
Currently unavailable, and unfortunately no date known when it will be back
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- Hardback£90.00(9780521470285)
This book reports the results of quantitative investigation analysing governmental instability in sixteen West European countries.
A highly puzzling phenomena in politics is why some parliamentary democracies, such as Britain, manage to produce highly durable governments, whereas others, such as Italy, experience instability. This book uses an innovative statistical methodology and data set to analyse sixteen West European countries over the entire post-war period.This book describes the results of a quantitative investigation into one of the central questions of political science: what determines how long governments survive in parliamentary democracies? Government survival is important because it constitutes an essential component of the overall functioning of parliamentary democracies; it is also closely associated with the introduction to the discipline of event history analysis, a highly promising statistical methodology. The investigation utilizes this methodology on what is undoubtedly the most comprehensive data set yet assembled on governments, comprising hundreds of variables measured for governments in sixteen West European parliamentary democracies over the entire post-war period to 1989. The results fundamentally challenge the central thread of theorizing on government survival and point to an alternative conceptualization of the relationship among governments, parties and voters.
"Warwick's book will challenge students of governmental survival to rethink and sharpen their own models. His focus on ideological diversity within governments and economic trends adds useful perspectives." Journal of Politics
ISBN: 9780521038317
Dimensions: 227mm x 151mm x 10mm
Weight: 309g
200 pages