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Representative democracy and the populist temptation
pp. 111-130
Abstract
My topic sounds rather conventional in terms of a traditional institutional approach. But the "enlightened neo-institutionalists' of our days came back to the old controversies of the late 1940s when in the United States a debate was waged whether one should introduce a parliamentary system in the USA. After 1945 even the American Political Science Association—normally refraining from ex-cathedra-normative statements—made contributions about a "Toward a more responsible Two-Party System" (1950) in order to push the presidential system into another form of representative government, as an American functional equivalent of a British cabinet government.
Publication details
Published in:
(2014) Klaus von Beyme: pioneer in the study of political theory and comparative politics. Dordrecht, Springer.
Pages: 111-130
DOI: 10.1007/978-3-319-01535-4_9
Full citation:
von Beyme Klaus (2014) Representative democracy and the populist temptation, In: Klaus von Beyme, Dordrecht, Springer, 111–130.