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Power Dividing

Power Dividing. Key Authors Philip G. Roeder and Donald Rothchild, eds., Sustainable Peace: Power and Democracy after Civil Wars. Cornell University Press, 2005 Contributions therein especially from Rothchild & Roeder, Roeder, Lake & Rothchild, Bunce & Watts, Reilly, Sisk & Stefes.

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Power Dividing

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  1. Power Dividing • Key Authors • Philip G. Roeder and Donald Rothchild, eds., Sustainable Peace: Power and Democracy after Civil Wars. Cornell University Press, 2005 • Contributions therein especially from Rothchild & Roeder, Roeder, Lake & Rothchild, Bunce & Watts, Reilly, Sisk & Stefes

  2. Perils of Power Sharing • Institutional weapons • Limits on democracy • Governmental inefficiency • Governmental rigidity • Inadequate enforcement

  3. Alternatives to Power Sharing • Majoritarian democracy • Protectorate under foreign power(s) or international organization(s) • Partition into independent states • Power division

  4. Three Strategies of Power Dividing • Civil liberties • Multiple majorities • Checks and balances

  5. Institutional Instruments of Power Dividing • Extensive human rights bills • Separation of powers between the branches of government and a range of specialised agencies • Checks and balances between decision making centres • Power dividing thus favours: • presidential over parliamentary systems • bicameral over unicameral legislatures • independent judiciaries with powers of judicial review extending to acts of both legislative and executive branches

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