1st Edition

Post-Communist Parliaments Change and Stability in the Second Decade

Edited By David M. Olson, Gabriella Ilonszki Copyright 2012
    160 Pages 3 B/W Illustrations
    by Routledge

    At the end of the "founding" or initial decade, the new parliaments of post-Communist Europe had developed two distinct types: democratic and presidentially-dominated. Whilst in the early years, they had been characterised as "parliaments in adolescence," they have - through the second decade - continued to improvise but also elaborate their working relationships with both their chief executives and electorates.

    This book examines these adaptations in seven parliaments, comparing both among them and with parliaments of west Europe. Their changes are traced through four distinct sets in context, members, internal structure, and working relationship with the executive. This research develops a common perspective for our understanding of both new and developed legislatures by tracing the steps through which new parliaments begin, adapt and become established.

    This book was published as a special issue of Journal of Legislative Studies.

    Part I: Introduction

    1. Beyond the Initial Decade - Gabriella Ilonszki and David M. Olson

    Part II: The Parliaments

    2. Stable Democratic Parliaments - Zdenka Mansfeldova and Petra Rakusanova

    3. Presidentially Dominated Parliaments - William E. Crowther

    Part III: Post-Communist Parliaments Compared

    4. Legislative-Executive Relations - Radoslaw Zubek

    5. Internal Organization: Party, Committee, Leadership - Drago Zajc

    6. Interest Representation and Parliaments - Danica Fink-Hafner

    7. Varieties of Bicameralism Through Two Decades - Petra Rakusanova

    Part IV: Conclusion

    8. Two Decades of Divergent Parliamentary Development - David M. Olson and Gabriella Ilonszki

    Bibliography

    Biography

    David M. Olson is Professor Emeritus of Political Science and Senior Research Fellow in the Center for Legislative Studies, University of North Carolina at Greensboro, USA.

    Gabriella Ilonszki is Professor of Political Science at Corvinus University of Budapest, Hungary.