British and French Parliaments in Comparative Perspective

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A01=Gerhard Loewenberg
Author_Gerhard Loewenberg
Category=JPB
Category=JPHC
comparative political systems
Compulsory Deposits
De Gaulle
De Gaulle's Speech
De Gaulle’s Speech
democratic theory
Direct Democracy
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Eugen Gerstenmaier
executive legislative relations
Extraparliamentary Opposition
Fourth Republic
Franco American
FranS Goguel
French Governors
French Political System
Full Legislative Power
General De Gaulle
Gerhard Loewenberg
German Political Scientists
Government Parliament Relations
Government's Independence
Government’s Independence
Group Agents
Henry C. Hart
institutional reform analysis
James Bryce
John C. Wahlke
John P. Mackintosh
Legislative Output
legislative studies
Loewenberg Gerhard
Loyal Majority
Nineteenth Century House
Package Vote
parliamentary institutional change
Parliamentary Timetable
Philip Williams
political representation models
Public Accounts Committee
Responsible Party Model
UNR
Wilhelm Hennis
Young Men

Product details

  • ISBN 9780202363608
  • Weight: 249g
  • Dimensions: 152 x 229mm
  • Publication Date: 15 May 2010
  • Publisher: Taylor & Francis Inc
  • Publication City/Country: US
  • Product Form: Paperback
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The representative assembly, or parliament, as it is most widely called, is at once an old, a ubiquitous, and a controversial political institution. In this century it has attracted the criticism of both disillusioned democrats and true believers in the superior representatives of mass movements or of charismatic leaders. Even among its supporters the institution is constantly the object of reform. This book deals with parliament (the generic term for what also may be known as legislature, congress, assembly, diet, or knesset), what it has been and is, what it does and should do, and what may become of it.

In a wide-ranging and excellently organized introductory essay, Loewenberg defines the parliamentary institution and discusses its role in modern times. He points out that since its appearance in the Middle Ages, the parliamentary system has been adopted by almost every country, including in recent years the newly independent nations of Africa and the Middle East. This essay is followed by differing and often contradictory views, by American and European scholars, of the role of a parliament. Issues are defined in the form of examinations of specific parliamentary bodies, such as the House of Commons, the Bundestag, the French Parliament under the Fifth Republic, and the Indian Parliament.

Writing from the perspective of different national experiences, the contributors display varied perceptions and expectations of the institution, noting those that sustain it even while they make it controversial. Intended primarily as provocative reading for students of comparative government and comparative political institutions; this book illuminates "one of the most enduring and widely applicable inventions of political man, thus making it also a valuable work for scholars as well as practitioners of the political and party process.

Gerhard Loewenberg is professor emeritus of political science at the University of Iowa. He is also the director of the Comparative Legislative Research Center at the University of Iowa. In addition he is the author or editor of numerous books including Parliament in the German Political System and Legislatures: Comparative Perspectives on Representative Assemblies.

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