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Förhandlingsparlamentarism: en jämförande studie av riksdagen och folketinget

Mattson, Ingvar (1996)
Abstract
This thesis is about bargaining in the Swedish Riksdag and the Danish Folketing. It departs from the propositions, forwarded by Swedish and Danish scholars. (1) that the level of conflict in the parliaments have increased and (2) that minority governments are weak and unable to pursue a consequent and responsible economic policy. It examines the function of bargaining between political parties (emphasising bargaining between the Government and the Opposition). The analysis starts from a normative perspective and continues with an empirical examination of the politics of the budgetary processes in the two parliaments from 1971 to 1995.



Theoretically, a two-level model of political parties bargaining behaviour is developed... (More)
This thesis is about bargaining in the Swedish Riksdag and the Danish Folketing. It departs from the propositions, forwarded by Swedish and Danish scholars. (1) that the level of conflict in the parliaments have increased and (2) that minority governments are weak and unable to pursue a consequent and responsible economic policy. It examines the function of bargaining between political parties (emphasising bargaining between the Government and the Opposition). The analysis starts from a normative perspective and continues with an empirical examination of the politics of the budgetary processes in the two parliaments from 1971 to 1995.



Theoretically, a two-level model of political parties bargaining behaviour is developed which takes both rational behaviour and social norms into account.



The empirical findings do not provide evidence to support the hypothesis about an increased level of conflict. Instead there is a cycle of conflicts and resolutions in both Swedish and Danish parliamentary decision-making. The parties often find themselves in situations where they have both coinciding and conflicting interests - which is the very ground for a bargaining situation. Moreover the study shows that minority governments might compensate for their lack of majority in parliament with bargaining powers.



Finally a new classification system is developed in which the two main types of parliamentary systems are labelled bargaining parliamentarianism and voting parliamentarianism. The Riksdag and the Folketing should both be classified in the category bargaining parliamentarianism. However, the Folketing is a more illustrative case than the Riksdag. (Less)
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author
supervisor
opponent
  • unknown], [unknown
alternative title
Bargaining Parliamentarianism: A Comparative Study of the Swedish Riksdag and the Danish Folketing
publishing date
type
Thesis
publication status
published
subject
keywords
economic policy, Denmark, Sweden, political parties, negotiations, Parliament, bargaining, förvaltningskunskap, parliamentary system, Political and administrative sciences, Statsvetenskap, budgeting
pages
270 pages
publisher
Lund University Press
defense location
Hörsalen, Eden rum 116.
defense date
1996-06-07 10:15:00
ISBN
9l 7966-376-l
language
Swedish
LU publication?
no
id
2435d1e7-bf36-42e1-af11-b166a6107429 (old id 17701)
date added to LUP
2016-04-01 15:50:22
date last changed
2018-11-21 20:36:45
@phdthesis{2435d1e7-bf36-42e1-af11-b166a6107429,
  abstract     = {{This thesis is about bargaining in the Swedish Riksdag and the Danish Folketing. It departs from the propositions, forwarded by Swedish and Danish scholars. (1) that the level of conflict in the parliaments have increased and (2) that minority governments are weak and unable to pursue a consequent and responsible economic policy. It examines the function of bargaining between political parties (emphasising bargaining between the Government and the Opposition). The analysis starts from a normative perspective and continues with an empirical examination of the politics of the budgetary processes in the two parliaments from 1971 to 1995.<br/><br>
<br/><br>
Theoretically, a two-level model of political parties bargaining behaviour is developed which takes both rational behaviour and social norms into account.<br/><br>
<br/><br>
The empirical findings do not provide evidence to support the hypothesis about an increased level of conflict. Instead there is a cycle of conflicts and resolutions in both Swedish and Danish parliamentary decision-making. The parties often find themselves in situations where they have both coinciding and conflicting interests - which is the very ground for a bargaining situation. Moreover the study shows that minority governments might compensate for their lack of majority in parliament with bargaining powers.<br/><br>
<br/><br>
Finally a new classification system is developed in which the two main types of parliamentary systems are labelled bargaining parliamentarianism and voting parliamentarianism. The Riksdag and the Folketing should both be classified in the category bargaining parliamentarianism. However, the Folketing is a more illustrative case than the Riksdag.}},
  author       = {{Mattson, Ingvar}},
  isbn         = {{9l 7966-376-l}},
  keywords     = {{economic policy; Denmark; Sweden; political parties; negotiations; Parliament; bargaining; förvaltningskunskap; parliamentary system; Political and administrative sciences; Statsvetenskap; budgeting}},
  language     = {{swe}},
  publisher    = {{Lund University Press}},
  title        = {{Förhandlingsparlamentarism: en jämförande studie av riksdagen och folketinget}},
  year         = {{1996}},
}