
Political Institutions
Democracy and Social Choice
Colomer(Author)
Oxford University Press
Published on 6. March 2003
Book
Paperback/Softback
266 pages
978-0-19-924184-2 (ISBN)
Description
The role of institutions is to establish the domains of public activity and the rules to select leaders. Democratic regimes organized in simple institutional frameworks to foster the concentration of power and alternative successive absolute winners and losers. They favour political satisfaction of relatively small groups, as well as policy instability. In contrast, pluralistic institutions produce multiple winners, including multiparty co-operation and agreements. They favour stable, moderate, and consensual policies that can satisfy large groups' interests on a great number of issues.
The more complex the political institutions, the more stable and socially efficient the outcome will be. This book develops an extensive analysis of this relationship. It explores concepts, questions and insights based on social choice theory, while empirical focus is cast on more than 40 democratic countries and a few international organizations from late medieval times to the present. The book argues that pluralistic democratic institutions are better than simple formulas for their higher capacity of producing socially satisfactory results.
The more complex the political institutions, the more stable and socially efficient the outcome will be. This book develops an extensive analysis of this relationship. It explores concepts, questions and insights based on social choice theory, while empirical focus is cast on more than 40 democratic countries and a few international organizations from late medieval times to the present. The book argues that pluralistic democratic institutions are better than simple formulas for their higher capacity of producing socially satisfactory results.
Reviews / Votes
Review from previous edition 'Political Institutions' is an outstanding contribution to the growing literature challenging the conventional wisdom that majoritarian, concentrated-power democracy provides the most 'decisive' and effective government. Instead, as Colomer's logical and empirical analysis convincingly demonstrates, sharing power and dividing power are much more advantageous. A first-rate scholarly achievement! * Arend Lijphart, University of California, San Diego * Josep Colomer has produced a rigorous, accessible analysis of social choice in democratic settings. Its empirical scope is broad, its emphasis on institutions is crisp, and its arguments are persuasive. 'Political Institutions' graces Oxford UP's new series on comparative politics. * Kenneth Shepsle, Harvard University * A happy marriage of social choice theory with comparative politics, well worth reading, and including on syllabi . One strength is the author's knack for supplying historical material that illustrates the relevance of social choice theory to the study of political institutions. In this sense, Colomer's book follows in the tradition of William H. Riker's 'Liberalism Against Populism' (1982), although 'Political Institutions' is empirically richer, and much more accessible to a non-technical audience Colomer does this so well, with such a keen sense for how the basic intuitions from social choice theory map onto real-world politics, that Political Institutions should become a staple of reading lists on positive political theory and comparative politics. * American Political Science Review * This book should attract a broad readership from different fields within political science...easily intelligible and thoroughly pleasant read. * Political Studies * Compulsory reading for every professional of the social sciences, of political activity or public sphere and of decision-making in any field of economic and social life. * Revista Espanola de Ciencia Politica. * A well framed, well constructed, well documented and well argued book. * Rivista Italiana di Scienza Politica * The author's erudition, along with his masterful application of social choice theory, make this book compulsory reading for students of comparative politics and constitutional law. * Mexico Politica y Gobierno *More details
Series
Language
English
Place of publication
Oxford
United Kingdom
Target group
Professional and scholarly
Illustrations
tables
Dimensions
Height: 234 mm
Width: 156 mm
Thickness: 15 mm
Weight
412 gr
ISBN-13
978-0-19-924184-2 (9780199241842)
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Schweitzer Classification
Other editions
Additional editions

E-Book
02/2001
OUP eBook
€31.49
Available for download
Person
Josep H. Colomer, Professor of Political Science and Economics at the Higher Council of Scientific Research and the Pompeu Fabra University, Barcelona
Content
1. Politics and Social Choice ; 2. Who Can Vote ; 3. How Votes are Counted ; 4. What is Voted For ; 5. Choosing Socially Effective Institutions