Institutions and the Fate of Democracy: Germany and Poland in the Twentieth Century

Couverture
University of Pittsburgh Press, 2005 - 310 pages

As democracy has swept the globe, the question of why some democracies succeed while others fail has remained a pressing concern. In this theoretically innovative, richly historical study, Michael Bernhard looks at the process by which new democracies choose their political institutions, showing how these fundamental choices shape democracy's survival.

Offering a new analytical framework that maps the process by which basic political institu-tions emerge, Bernhard investigates four paradigmatic episodes of democracy in two countries: Germany during the Weimar period and after World War II, and Poland between the world wars and after the fall of communism.

Students of democracy will appreciate the broad applicability of Bernhard's findings, while area specialists will welcome the book's accessible and detailed historical accounts.

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Table des matières

Defective Institutional Choice
26
Institutional Choice by Imposition
78
Learning from History
114
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À propos de l'auteur (2005)

Michael Bernhard is associate professor of political science at the Pennsylvania State University.

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