ABSTRACT

The relationship between a head of government (head of the executive branch) and a nation's parliament or legislative assembly (the legislative branch) has long been the focus for comment and analysis - for example, has the prime minister in the United Kingdom come to a position of dominance at the expense of the power of parliament? Does the American president stand head and shoulders above Congress? Is a French president master of the system? Need the Russian president pay attention to the Duma? What of the position in other parliamentary and presidential systems?

In this book, Baldwin seeks to provide answers, and does so by drawing upon the knowledge and expertise of an international group of scholars whose essays advance our knowledge of the subject.

This book was previously published as a special issue of the Journal of Legislative Studies.

chapter |3 pages

Introduction

chapter 1|34 pages

United Kingdom

The Prime Minister and Parliament

chapter 2|15 pages

United Kingdom

A Comparative Case Study of Labour Prime Ministers Attlee, Wilson, Callaghan and Blair

chapter 3|13 pages

United Kingdom

A Comparative Case Study of Conservative Prime Ministers Heath, Thatcher and Major

chapter 4|13 pages

United Kingdom

Life after Number 10 – Premiers Emeritus and Parliament

chapter 6|11 pages

Germany

Chancellors and the Bundestag

chapter 7|19 pages

The Prime Minister in Scandinavia

‘Superstar' or Supervisor?

chapter 8|14 pages

Hungary

The Emergence of Chancellor Democracy

chapter 11|19 pages

Institutional Fragmentation in Parliamentary Control

The Italian Case

chapter 14|12 pages

Executive Leadership and Legislative Assemblies

Latin America

chapter 15|20 pages

Russia

chapter 16|13 pages

Japan

The Prime Minister and the Japanese Diet

chapter 17|15 pages

Choosing a Prime Minister

Executive–Legislative Relations in Israel in the 1990s

chapter 19|8 pages

Concluding Observations

Legislative Weakness, Scrutinising Strength?