Minority governments and legislative reliability: Evidence from Denmark and Sweden

When are minority cabinets effective? We study the extent to which minority cabinets demonstrate legislative reliability, that is, introduce to parliament the bills they have announced in their legislative agendas. We test hypotheses drawn from two theories of minority government effectiveness: the...

Celý popis

Podrobná bibliografie
Hlavní autoři: Klüver, H, Zubek, R
Médium: Journal article
Vydáno: SAGE Publications 2017
_version_ 1826268846362722304
author Klüver, H
Zubek, R
author_facet Klüver, H
Zubek, R
author_sort Klüver, H
collection OXFORD
description When are minority cabinets effective? We study the extent to which minority cabinets demonstrate legislative reliability, that is, introduce to parliament the bills they have announced in their legislative agendas. We test hypotheses drawn from two theories of minority government effectiveness: the positional agenda power theory which emphasizes the central location of the minority cabinet in the policy space and the ideological proximity theory which stresses the importance of the ideological closeness of opposition parties to the government. In an analysis of over 1600 bills announced by Danish and Swedish minority cabinets in 19 legislative agendas published between 1998 and 2012, we find more support, overall, for the ideological proximity than for the positional agenda power model.
first_indexed 2024-03-06T21:15:51Z
format Journal article
id oxford-uuid:3fc4bf0c-08e1-44e7-a817-3bb93a717156
institution University of Oxford
last_indexed 2024-03-06T21:15:51Z
publishDate 2017
publisher SAGE Publications
record_format dspace
spelling oxford-uuid:3fc4bf0c-08e1-44e7-a817-3bb93a7171562022-03-26T14:34:00ZMinority governments and legislative reliability: Evidence from Denmark and SwedenJournal articlehttp://purl.org/coar/resource_type/c_dcae04bcuuid:3fc4bf0c-08e1-44e7-a817-3bb93a717156Symplectic Elements at OxfordSAGE Publications2017Klüver, HZubek, RWhen are minority cabinets effective? We study the extent to which minority cabinets demonstrate legislative reliability, that is, introduce to parliament the bills they have announced in their legislative agendas. We test hypotheses drawn from two theories of minority government effectiveness: the positional agenda power theory which emphasizes the central location of the minority cabinet in the policy space and the ideological proximity theory which stresses the importance of the ideological closeness of opposition parties to the government. In an analysis of over 1600 bills announced by Danish and Swedish minority cabinets in 19 legislative agendas published between 1998 and 2012, we find more support, overall, for the ideological proximity than for the positional agenda power model.
spellingShingle Klüver, H
Zubek, R
Minority governments and legislative reliability: Evidence from Denmark and Sweden
title Minority governments and legislative reliability: Evidence from Denmark and Sweden
title_full Minority governments and legislative reliability: Evidence from Denmark and Sweden
title_fullStr Minority governments and legislative reliability: Evidence from Denmark and Sweden
title_full_unstemmed Minority governments and legislative reliability: Evidence from Denmark and Sweden
title_short Minority governments and legislative reliability: Evidence from Denmark and Sweden
title_sort minority governments and legislative reliability evidence from denmark and sweden
work_keys_str_mv AT kluverh minoritygovernmentsandlegislativereliabilityevidencefromdenmarkandsweden
AT zubekr minoritygovernmentsandlegislativereliabilityevidencefromdenmarkandsweden