Executive Decree Authority

Executive Decree Authority

by Matthew Soberg Shugart (Editor), JohnM.Carey (Editor)

Synopsis

When presidents or prime ministers make law by decree, are we witnessing the usurpation of legislative authority? The increased frequency of policy-making by decree, in older democracies as well as in the newer regimes of Latin America and the post-communist world, has generated concern that legislatures are being marginalized and thus that democratic institutions are not functioning. Professors Carey and Shugart suggest which elements of constitutional design should (and should not) foster reliance on decree authority. Individual chapters then bring the experiences of Argentina, Brazil, France, Italy, Peru, Russia, the United States, and Venezuela to bear on the theory. The book combines broadly comparative analysis with intensive case studies to provide a more thorough understanding of the scope of executive authority across countries.

$28.56

Quantity

10 in stock

More Information

Format: Paperback
Pages: 345
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Published: 13 May 1998

ISBN 10: 0521597226
ISBN 13: 9780521597227

Media Reviews
This important book is well worth the attention of comparativists and should serve as a guide to further endeavours in the field of executive-legislative relations. William M. Downs, Canadian Journal of Political Science
This intriguing book provides useful conceptual tools for analyzing presidential decree authority...Executive Decree Authority will be helpful both as a handbook that will inform the literature on the different practices of executive decree authority in various presidential democracies and as a work that provides a more nuanced analysis of the subject. Latin American Research Review
This important book is well worth the attention of comparativists and should serve as a guide to further endeavours in the field of executive-legislative relations. William M. Downs, Canadian Journal of Political Science
Author Bio
John M. Carey is John Wentworth Professor in the Social Sciences at Dartmouth College. He has also taught at the Universidad Cat lica de Chile, the University of Rochester, Washington University in St Louis, Harvard University, and at the Fundaci n Juan March in Madrid, Spain. His interests are comparative politics, elections, and Latin American politics. His research focuses on institutional design and democratic representation. Carey's books include Legislative Voting and Accountability (Cambridge University Press), Presidents and Assemblies: Constitutional Design and Electoral Dynamics (with Matthew Shugart, Cambridge University Press), Term Limits in the State Legislatures (with Richard Niemi and Lynda Powell, University of Michigan Press), and Term Limits and Legislative Representation (Cambridge University Press). He has published articles in the American Journal of Political Science, the Journal of Politics, Perspectives on Politics, Comparative Political Studies, Legislative Studies Quarterly, Electoral Studies, Party Politics, Comparative Politics, Latin American Politics and Society, Public Choice, Estudios Publicos, Political y Gobierno, the Revista de Ciencias Politicas, and the Revista Brasileira de Ci ncias Sociais, as well as chapters in twenty edited volumes. Data and results from his research are available on his website (http://www.dartmouth.edu/~jcarey/).