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The Regime Question - (Princeton Studies in American Politics) by Amel Ahmed
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Highlights
- Ongoing struggles over core principles of democratic governance The regime question--often boiled down to "democracy or autocracy?
- About the Author: Amel Ahmed is associate professor of political science at the University of Massachusetts Amherst.
- 352 Pages
- Political Science, Comparative Politics
- Series Name: Princeton Studies in American Politics
Description
Book Synopsis
Ongoing struggles over core principles of democratic governance
The regime question--often boiled down to "democracy or autocracy?"--has been central to democratic politics from the start. This has entailed not only fights over the extent of the franchise but also, crucially, ongoing struggles over core principles of democracy, the "rules of the game." In this timely study, Amel Ahmed examines the origins and development of the regime question in Western democracies and considers the implications for regime contention today. She argues that battles over the regime question were so foundational and so enduring that they constitute a dimension of politics that polarized political opponents across the regime divide.
Ahmed investigates four historical cases in the study of democratic development: the United Kingdom between the Reform Act of 1832 and World War II (1832-1939), Imperial and Weimar-era Germany (1876-1933), the French Third Republic (1870-1939), and the United States before World War II (1789-1939). Focusing on legislative politics as an essential site of democratic governance and key to understanding long-term democratic endurance, she shows that when the regime question became salient, it hindered the formation of viable legislative coalitions along the left-right policy spectrum. This failure opened the door to executive encroachment, destabilizing the regime. Ahmed shows that the resurgence of the regime question today is not, as is often assumed, a break with prior trajectories of political development but a new instantiation of battles fought in previous eras.
Review Quotes
"Interesting and innovative. . . . [The Regime Question] really contributes something different in a way that adds to the conversation"---Justin Kempf, Democracy Paradox
About the Author
Amel Ahmed is associate professor of political science at the University of Massachusetts Amherst. She is the author of Democracy and the Politics of Electoral System Choice: Engineering Electoral Dominance.