Description

Book Synopsis

This book tackles the perennial debate about whether presidentialism is associated with democratic breakdown. We integrate both institutional and behavioral arguments to discuss how institutional rigidity in changing executive power would stimulate citizens to adopt relatively violent means to address their grievances. Evidence from cross-national surveys is collected, and the results show that our central premises are indeed supported. We then employ a cross-national time-series data from 1946 to 2008 to examine the conditions in which a democracy enters into a crisis, and the conditions in which a crisis escalates into a democratic breakdown. Although the book finds evidence that presidentialism could contribute instabilities to a democratic system, it does not directly follow that those instabilities will trigger a democratic breakdown. In other words, presidential democracies are more likely to encounter crises than either parliamentary or semi-presidential systems. However, onc

Trade Review

Yao-Yuan Yeh and Charles Wu’s tour de force revisits and elaborates Juan Linz’s classic argument about the perils of presidentialism by providing nuanced answers to the questions of why and how this institution generates distinct behavioral outcomes and political consequences compared to other institutions. This book not only enriches scholarly debates in the fields of comparative politics and political behavior, but also provides important policy implications for the changing prospects of democracies today.

-- Yen-Pin Su, National Chengchi University

In Presidentialism, Violence, and the Prospect of Democracy, the authors engage in an important dialogue with scholars of democracy/democratization and constitutional engineering on the importance of the choice of institutional design in political performance. In this rigorous, systematic, and empirical work, Yeh and Wu provide even stronger support to the ever-growing doubts about the efficacy of presidentialism to deliver the desired democratic outcomes, especially for developing presidential democratic countries. This excellent work is a must-read inclusion in course syllabus of postgraduate seminars in contemporary democracies.

-- Alexander C. Tan, University of Canterbury

Table of Contents

Chapter 1: Institutional Designs and Prospect of Democracy

Chapter 2: Why Presidentialism Is Dangerous

Chapter 3: Presidentialism and Violent Attitudes: Evidence from the World Value Survey

Chapter 4: Presidentialism and Violent Behavior: Evidence from the Asian Barometer Survey

Chapter 5: Presidentialism and Democratic Crisis: A Two Steps Examination of the Global Democracies

Presidentialism Violence and the Prospect of

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    Order before 4pm tomorrow for delivery by Sat 27 Jun 2026.

    A Hardback by Charles K.S. Wu, Charles K. S. Wu

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      View other formats and editions of Presidentialism Violence and the Prospect of by Charles K.S. Wu

      Publisher: Lexington Books
      Publication Date: 1/10/2021 12:02:00 AM
      ISBN13: 9781498524308, 978-1498524308
      ISBN10: 1498524303

      Description

      Book Synopsis

      This book tackles the perennial debate about whether presidentialism is associated with democratic breakdown. We integrate both institutional and behavioral arguments to discuss how institutional rigidity in changing executive power would stimulate citizens to adopt relatively violent means to address their grievances. Evidence from cross-national surveys is collected, and the results show that our central premises are indeed supported. We then employ a cross-national time-series data from 1946 to 2008 to examine the conditions in which a democracy enters into a crisis, and the conditions in which a crisis escalates into a democratic breakdown. Although the book finds evidence that presidentialism could contribute instabilities to a democratic system, it does not directly follow that those instabilities will trigger a democratic breakdown. In other words, presidential democracies are more likely to encounter crises than either parliamentary or semi-presidential systems. However, onc

      Trade Review

      Yao-Yuan Yeh and Charles Wu’s tour de force revisits and elaborates Juan Linz’s classic argument about the perils of presidentialism by providing nuanced answers to the questions of why and how this institution generates distinct behavioral outcomes and political consequences compared to other institutions. This book not only enriches scholarly debates in the fields of comparative politics and political behavior, but also provides important policy implications for the changing prospects of democracies today.

      -- Yen-Pin Su, National Chengchi University

      In Presidentialism, Violence, and the Prospect of Democracy, the authors engage in an important dialogue with scholars of democracy/democratization and constitutional engineering on the importance of the choice of institutional design in political performance. In this rigorous, systematic, and empirical work, Yeh and Wu provide even stronger support to the ever-growing doubts about the efficacy of presidentialism to deliver the desired democratic outcomes, especially for developing presidential democratic countries. This excellent work is a must-read inclusion in course syllabus of postgraduate seminars in contemporary democracies.

      -- Alexander C. Tan, University of Canterbury

      Table of Contents

      Chapter 1: Institutional Designs and Prospect of Democracy

      Chapter 2: Why Presidentialism Is Dangerous

      Chapter 3: Presidentialism and Violent Attitudes: Evidence from the World Value Survey

      Chapter 4: Presidentialism and Violent Behavior: Evidence from the Asian Barometer Survey

      Chapter 5: Presidentialism and Democratic Crisis: A Two Steps Examination of the Global Democracies

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