Comparative Politics II. Classifying governments Luca Verzichelli / Filippo Tronconi Comparative...

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Comparative Politics II. Classifying governments Luca Verzichelli / Filippo Tronconi Comparative Politics Academic year 2014-2015

Transcript of Comparative Politics II. Classifying governments Luca Verzichelli / Filippo Tronconi Comparative...

Page 1: Comparative Politics II. Classifying governments Luca Verzichelli / Filippo Tronconi Comparative Politics Academic year 2014-2015.

Comparative Politics

II. Classifying governments

Luca Verzichelli / Filippo TronconiComparative Politics

Academic year 2014-2015

Page 2: Comparative Politics II. Classifying governments Luca Verzichelli / Filippo Tronconi Comparative Politics Academic year 2014-2015.

Classifying governments: an old puzzle

(too) many applications. For instance•Democratic vs non democratic regimes•Monocratic vs. collegial governments•Nature of head of state in different democracies

Page 3: Comparative Politics II. Classifying governments Luca Verzichelli / Filippo Tronconi Comparative Politics Academic year 2014-2015.

Three main branches of comparative government (Schmitter)

This classification recalls the three institutionalism, applying the classification to the study of contemporary democratic government•Classic (historical/sociological) institutionalism (Weber, Aron, Almond …)•Legal constitutionalism (Bagehot, Duverger, Friedrich, von Beyme)•Rational institutionalism (Olson, Downs, Buchanan, Riker…)

Page 4: Comparative Politics II. Classifying governments Luca Verzichelli / Filippo Tronconi Comparative Politics Academic year 2014-2015.

Long term dynamics of world regimes1) World regimes before the late 18th century; traditional monarchies and a few republics; 2) The ‘invention’ of the presidential system in the United States in 1787 after the failure of the

1776 ‘confederal’ system; 3) Success of American presidentialism, spread of the idea in Latin America and its failure

(1820s onwards); 4) Development of parliamentarism in Europe under monarchical rule from the early 19th

century to 1914. First exception: France (parliamentary republic in 1875, the first ever); 5) Difficulties experienced by parliamentary government in Europe from 1918 to 1945; 6) Spread of presidentialism in Africa from the 1960s and its major problems: instability and

military rule; 7) The emergence of another political system, communism in 1918, its growth and its decline:

spread of presidentialism to replace communism in the ex- Soviet Union; 8) Presidentialism is thus the majority ‘model’ across the world, typically in new countries, but

with many different forms, most of which are vastly different from the original American model, the main alternative being parliamentarism (both monarchical and republican), which tends to characterise European (and Commonwealth) countries;

9) American presidential model has been successful in America, but almost exclusively in America: does it deserve the criticisms it has received (Linz, Riggs)? If parliamentarism is praised, why has it not spread markedly beyond European (and Commonwealth) countries (except to a limited extent in Asia)?

Page 5: Comparative Politics II. Classifying governments Luca Verzichelli / Filippo Tronconi Comparative Politics Academic year 2014-2015.

Parliamentary democracy as a system of government

• Paradox: parliamentary government as “prime ministerial” government. Fusion between parliamentary majority and executive. Relative weakness of legislatures as autonomous institutions

• Long history of focus on the executive-legislative relationships. Traditional distinction based on the separation of powers vs. fused power systems

• Then: Congressional vs. Parliamentary government (Wilson 1885): a warning against the transformation of a too centralised federal system and too strong committee-based congress

Page 6: Comparative Politics II. Classifying governments Luca Verzichelli / Filippo Tronconi Comparative Politics Academic year 2014-2015.

New classification of democratic regimes Cheibub, J. (2007), Presidentialism, Parliamentarism, and Democracy. CUP.

1. Executive responsible to an elective chamber?

NO YES

2. Is the president elected autonomously from the rest of the Executive?

YES NO

2. Is the cabinet responsible to the President?

YES NO

PRESIDENTIAL democracy

PARLIAMENTARY democracy

PARLIAMENTARY democracy

MIXED democracy

Page 7: Comparative Politics II. Classifying governments Luca Verzichelli / Filippo Tronconi Comparative Politics Academic year 2014-2015.

Increasing importance of mixed democracy(Cheibub 2007)

• New mixed democracies (semi-presidential systems) in Central-Eastern Europe, and Africa

• Classic presidentialisms above all in Latin-America

Page 8: Comparative Politics II. Classifying governments Luca Verzichelli / Filippo Tronconi Comparative Politics Academic year 2014-2015.

Varieties of parliamentarisms

(A. Siaroff, Varieties of Parliamentarianism in the Advanced Industrial Democracies, International Political Science Review 2003; 24; 445)

• Cabinet dominance• Polarized systems with central role for a

fragmented parliament• Cooperative policy making diffusion with a

working parliament

Page 9: Comparative Politics II. Classifying governments Luca Verzichelli / Filippo Tronconi Comparative Politics Academic year 2014-2015.

Difficult agreement on what is semi-presidentialism P. Schleiter & E. Morgan-Jones: Review Article. Citizens, Presidents and Assemblies:The Study

of Semi-Presidentialism beyond Duverger and Linz (BJPS 2009)

• Duverger defined semi-presidentialism as a new political system model. What does it mean?

• Linz: the constitutional format shares many of the ‘perils of presidentialism’,

• Recent research has questioned the conceptual status of semi-presidentialism as a distinct regime type, and whether it has any distinct effects on politics.

• New possible conceptual tools to clarify the research agenda in the form of principal–agent theoretical work of democratic constitutions.