Institutional choice and democratic survival in new democracies -- Weimar Germany : defective institutional choice -- Interwar Poland : institutional choice by imposition -- The Federal Republic of Germany : learning from history -- Postcommunist Poland : institutional choice as an extended process
Summary
As democracy has swept the globe, the question of why some democracies succeed while others fail has remained a pressing concern. In this theoretically innovative, richly historical study, Michael Bernhard looks at the process by which new democracies choose their political institutions, showing how these fundamental choices shape democracy's survival. Offering a new analytical framework that maps the process by which basic political institu-tions emerge, Bernhard investigates four paradigmatic episodes of democracy in two countries: Germany during the Weimar period and after World War II, a
Bibliography
Includes bibliographical references (pages 285-303) and index
Notes
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English
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