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Parlamentarismus nebo poloprezidencialismus? Spor o klasifikaci středoevropských demokratických režimů
Author(s) -
Miloš Brunclík,
Michal Kubát
Publication year - 2014
Publication title -
středoevropské politické studie
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
eISSN - 1213-2691
pISSN - 1212-7817
DOI - 10.5817/cepsr.2014.23.118
Subject(s) - presidential system , political science , reading (process) , politics , positive economics , sociology , law , economics
While reading academic papers and books on political regimes in Central Europe, one can become aware of an interesting and remarkable fact: these regimes (forms of government) are classified rather differently. Whereas some scholars tend to approach them as parliamentary regimes, others classify them as semi-presidential ones. The major dividing line between these two perspectives runs between a large group of English-writing scholars based outside Central Europe and those from Central Europe itself. Having reviewed a large number of relevant studies in this field, the authors of this article argue that the key reason for the different assessments of Central European regimes resides mainly in a different theoretical (but also methodological) approach, which has important implications when considering how these regimes are treated in various studies. Whereas the group of English-writing scholars tends to adopt a minimalist institutional definition suggested by Robert Elgie, most Central European scholars prefer an approach (inspired by Duverger or Sartori) that emphasizes presidential powers, which are irrelevant to Elgie’s definition

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