Reforming parliamentary procedure in Turkey

Series

Middle East Studies;46

Abstract

Despite the fact that legislatures perform varying functions in different political systems, their power is doubted. It is argued that "even in liberal democracies, many complain about their impotence, their decline, their ineffectiveness..." On the other hand, in most nations, executives have more power to legislate than the legislatures. Earlier the executive power was a branch of the parliament. However as mass participation became widespread, legislatures have been faced with a common crisis. In other words, "the pressures of democracy and industrialization" led to the thesis of decline of legislatures and the executive became more dominant in political systems. Later, governmental specialization and leadership centralization led to a further decline of the legislatures.

Source Title

Publisher

Institute of Developing Economies

Course

Other identifiers

Book Title

Aspects of democratization in Turkey

Keywords

Degree Discipline

Degree Level

Degree Name

Citation

Published Version (Please cite this version)

Language

English