High Politics in the Low Countries: An Empirical Study of Coalition Agreements in Belgium and the Netherlands FROM THE PUBLISHER
This informative text deals with the emergence of coalition agreements, their contents, the problem of enforcement and with the question of whether or not the functions are performed in practice. It explores the idea that policy bargaining in government formation is not just an isolated process, but that it is a real chance for parties to deal with substantive and controversial issues at an early stage. The coalition agreements in which these issues are incorporated have become important in most multiparty systems, but they have received little attention in political science research. This book argues that more systematic attention for these institutional variables is highly useful in coalition research because it helps to explain processes and outcome in coalition politics.
About the Author: Arco I. Timmermans, Lecturer in Political Science and Public Policy, University of Twente, The Netherlands
SYNOPSIS
In this study, Timmermans explores the role of coalition agreements between political parties taking office together in Belgium and the Netherlands. Drawing upon five case studies of coalition governments from the 1970s through the 1990s, he analyzes the various ways coalition parties have dealt with controversial issues during government formation and beyond. Timmermans teaches at the U. of Twente in the Netherlands. Annotation ©2003 Book News, Inc., Portland, OR