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This bold and comprehensive reassessment of democracy in Venezuela explains why one of the oldest and most admired democracies in Latin America has become fragile after more than three decades of apparent stability.
The Venezuelan crisis is puzzling because Venezuela has held competitive elections since 1958; it has the fastest-growing economy in the region and a declining inflation rate; the military has not meddled in politics since 1962; there is no guerrilla insurgency; and drug trafficking has only begun to make an appearance.
The author locates the causes of Venezuela's current problems in two political institutions. The first is partidocracia, or partyarchy. Venezuelan political parties monopolize the electoral process, dominate the legislative process, and block many of the informal channels of representation, such as interest groups, the media, the courts, and independent opinion leaders.
The second cause is presidentialism, a system marked by frequent standoffs between the executive and the legislature that severely limit the president's ability to function effectively and that encourage opposition parties to frustrate the president in an effort to improve their own chances in future elections.
Highlighting parallels and contrasts with other countries in Latin America and the industrialized world, the author places Venezuelan democracy in a truly comparative context for the first time, in the process revealing that Venezuela has had the most extreme partyarchy in the non-communist world.
The combination of partyarchy and presidentialism has induced a cyclical pattern of factional struggles within the governing parties that has rendered them incapable of channeling popular demands between elections and has tarnished their image during campaigns.
The author shows that though partyarchy initially helped democracy survive in Venezuela by giving a handful of party leaders great authority to manage crises and prevent mass disturbances, it also limited accountability and stifled meaningful popular participation, which ultimately eroded the legitimacy of the democratic regime. Partyarchy also made the executive-legislative stalemates and constitutional crises typical of presidential systems more likely and more intractable.
The author supports his conclusions with evidence from his rigorous survey of 80 top leaders of the governing party, as well as from historical analysis, a multivariate model of Venezuelan elections, and more than a year of personal observation of party activities.
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Previews available in: English
Subjects
Political parties, Politics and government, Political parties, latin america, Venezuela, politics and government, Política y gobierno, 15.85 history of America, Demokratie, Partei, Parteienstaat, Präsidentielles Regierungssystem, Politieke partijen, Presidentieel systeem, Partidos politicos, Politica (america latina), Eleicoes, Historia latino-americana, Representative government and representationPlaces
VenezuelaShowing 2 featured editions. View all 2 editions?
Edition | Availability |
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1
Strong Parties and Lame Ducks: Presidential Partyarchy and Factionalism in Venezuela
February 1, 1997, Stanford University Press
Paperback
in English
0804729611 9780804729611
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2
Strong parties and lame ducks: presidential partyarchy and factionalism in Venezuela
1994, Stanford University Press
in English
0804722781 9780804722780
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