Item added to cart
This in-depth study of the decision-making processes of the early 2000s shows that the Swiss consensus democracy has changed considerably. Power relations have transformed, conflict has increased, coalitions have become more unstable and outputs less predictable. Yet these challenges to consensus politics provide opportunities for innovation.List Of Tables And Figures Introduction; Pascal Sciarini 1. From Corporatism To Bureaucratic And Partisan Politics: Changes In Decision-Making Processes Over Time; Pascal Sciarini 2. More Power Balance, Less Consensus: Changes In Decision-Making Structures Over Time; Pascal Sciarini 3. Looking Beneath The Surface: Differences In Decision-Making Structures Across Processes; Manuel Fischer 4. Dominance, Competition, Compromise Or Consensus? Explaining Decision-Making Structures; Manuel Fischer 5. Coalition Formation In Parliament And During The Policy Process; Manuel Fischer And Denise Traber 6. Europeanization, Institutional Changes And Differential Empowerment; Manuel Fischer, Pascal Sciarini, And Denise Traber 7. 'Going Public': The Mediatization Of Decision-Making Processes; Manuel Fischer And Pascal Sciarini 8. Who Is Influential And Why? The Determinants Of Reputational Power; Manuel Fischer And Pascal Sciarini 9. Who Is Successful And Who Is Not? Actors' Satisfaction With The Policy Output; Denise Traber 10. Reactive, Slow And Innovative? Decision-Making Structures And Policy Outputs; Manuel Fischer Conclusion; Pascal Sciarini Appendix References
'Is Swiss democracy still the slow-moving consensual model that Arend Lijphart described many years ago? Or have the European Union, globalization, immigration, the Swiss Peoples' Party, changes in bank secrecy regulations, and other factors transformed the political system into something else? In this major new book, three Swiss scholars, basing their analyses on hundreds of interviews and close examination of well chosen empirical cases of policymaking processes, show notlÓ+
Copyright © 2018 - 2024 ShopSpell