When Majorities Fail
When Majorities Fail is a study of institutional failure in Russia's first democratic legislature. Inadequate rules and a chaotic party system combined to make it nearly impossible to pass a coherent legislative program, including a new constitution. The internal instability in Russia's parliament is known as cycling, one of the most important theoretical concepts in formal study of legislatures. There are few recorded cases of cycling in politically important settings. This book documents the presence of cyclical majorities in Russian Parliament with comprehensive case and statistical analysis, and demonstrates how the failure to adopt a new constitution led to the confrontation between parliament and president in the fall of 1993. Earlier research has shown that the design of a legislative institution is crucial in preventing cycling. The author shows how the institutional design of the parliament failed, underscoring the importance of institutional design in a democratic transition.
- A book-length study of an important example of majority rule cycles
- Detailed study of the effect of institutional design on the consolidation of democracy in a country in transition
- A major empirical effort to study the effects of cycling in a legislative setting
Reviews & endorsements
"Andrews offers a rational-choice analysis of the short-lived Russian parliament that could not finalize a new constitution and was dissolved by Yeltsin amid fighting.... Recommended." Choice
Product details
November 2006Paperback
9780521030595
296 pages
228 × 152 × 19 mm
0.446kg
62 b/w illus. 23 tables
Available
Table of Contents
- Acknowledgments
- 1. Introduction
- 2. Cycling in action: Russia's constitutional crisis
- 3. Cycling and its consequences: a theoretical framework
- 4. Institutional design and implications for majority rule
- 5. Issue dimensions and partisan alliances
- 6. The structure of preferences
- 7. Legislative instability
- 8. The dynamics of agenda control in the Russian parliament
- 9. Implications of disequilibrium in transitional legislatures
- References
- Index.