Parliamentary Opposition in Old and New Democracies
In: Library of Legislative Studies
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In: Library of Legislative Studies
In: Palgrave studies in political leadership series
World Affairs Online
In: New horizons in leadership studies
In: Studien zur Demokratieforschung 10
World Affairs Online
In: UTB 2242
In: Politikwissenschaft
In: Studien zur Sozialwissenschaft 191
I. Hauptteil (systematisch-allgemeiner Teil) -- 1. Regierungsmehrheit und Opposition als Gegenstand sozial- und rechtswissenschaftlicher Forschung -- 2. Chancenprofile parlamentarischer Opposition im Vergleich (Fallauswahl) -- 3. Die formal-rechtliche Dimension des Gesetzgebungsverfahrens in den Parlamenten der Bundesrepublik Deutschland, Großbritanniens und Österreichs -- II. Hauptteil (empirisch-analytischer Teil) -- 1. Methodischer Zugang, Untersuchungszeitraum und Auswahl des empirischen Materials -- 2. Fallstudien zu ausgewählten Gesetzgebungsprozessen in der Bundesrepublik Deutschland, Großbritannien und Österreich -- Schlußbetrachtung.
In: German politics, S. 1-25
ISSN: 1743-8993
In: Party politics: an international journal for the study of political parties and political organizations, S. 135406882311668
ISSN: 1460-3683
One of the key defining features of Westminster-type democracies is the acknowledgement of an official Opposition and a Leader of the Opposition typically referred to as a 'prime minister in waiting'. This article focuses on this crucial element of Westminster democracy and applies a gender perspective, looking into women Leaders of the Opposition in the UK, Canada, New Zealand, and Australia (1975–2022). As this inquiry reveals, there have been few and mostly short-lived women Leaders of the Opposition. Further, contrary to plausible assumptions, there have been more women Leaders of the Opposition from conservative than from left-wing parties. In particular, however, the office of Leader of the Opposition has, with few exceptions, not proven as a springboard to the premiership. In fact, a majority of women prime ministers were 'takeover prime ministers', inheriting the office from a predecessor from their own party, rather than former Leaders of the Opposition, while many women Leaders of the Opposition were not even given the opportunity to lead their party into a national election campaign. The article discusses possible explanations for these patterns observed.
In: Representation, Band 59, Heft 3, S. 513-530
ISSN: 1749-4001
In: Government & opposition: an international journal of comparative politics, Band 58, Heft 2, S. 391-414
ISSN: 1477-7053
AbstractPolitical opposition has long been one of the most dramatically understudied elements of real-world politics in contemporary democratic and authoritarian regimes. The past decade or so has, however, witnessed an upsurge of new opposition research that begs for a major state-of-the-field review. Interestingly, recent scholarship has focused more on manifestations of opposition in authoritarian and hybrid than in democratic systems, which indicates a latent reconceptualization of political opposition (setting aside older distinctions between regime-loyal opposition and regime-challenging forms of resistance, dissidence and contestation). With a focus on party-based forms of opposition, which have been widely considered to mark the most effective form of opposition, this review article takes stock and highlights key issues for future research as well as some inherent obstacles to the emergence of a more integrated field of cross-regime opposition studies.
In: German politics and society, Band 40, Heft 2, S. 71-89
ISSN: 1558-5441
Olaf Scholz emerged as the Federal Republic's ninth chancellor from a context marked by several "firsts," including in particular the absence of an incumbent chancellor seeking re-election and a competition between three chancellor candidates. While few, if any, individual elements of Scholz's profile were exceptional, the combination of elements was as unique as the wider political context. Echoing similar experiences from the Merkel years, the 2021 campaign and results suggest that in the German political context, advanced levels of personalization in the electoral arena are not dependent on any particular charisma of the competing lead candidates. In the end, Scholz, who managed to portray himself as a de facto incumbent seeking re-election, profited strongly from the perceived limitations and deficiencies of his contenders. A historical assessment of competitions for the chancellorship also reveals that the stakes for unsuccessful chancellor candidates have risen dramatically.
In: Austrian journal of political science: OZP, Band 50, Heft 2, S. 15
ISSN: 2313-5433