64 research outputs found
Informal Interference in the Judiciary in New Democracies: A Comparison of Six African and Latin American Cases
This paper assesses the extent to which elected power holders informally intervene in the judiciaries of new democracies, an acknowledged but under-researched topic in studies of judicial politics. The paper first develops an empirical strategy for the study of informal interference based on perceptions recorded in interviews, then applies the strategy to six third-wave democracies, three in Africa (Benin, Madagascar and Senegal) and three in Latin America (Argentina, Chile and Paraguay). It also examines how three conditioning factors affect the level of informal judicial interference: formal rules, previous democratic experience, and socioeconomic development. Our results show that countries with better performance in all these conditioning factors exhibit less informal interference than countries with poorer or mixed performance. The results stress the importance of systematically including informal politics in the study of judicial politics
Regulating E-Cigarettes: Why Policies Diverge
This paper, part of a festschrift in honor of Professor Malcolm Feeley, explores the landscape of e-cigarette policy globally by looking at three jurisdictions that have taken starkly different approaches to regulating e-cigarettes—the US, Japan, and China. Each of those countries has a robust tobacco industry, government agencies entrusted with protecting public health, an active and sophisticated scientific and medical community, and a regulatory structure for managing new pharmaceutical, tobacco, and consumer products. All three are signatories of the World Health Organization’s Framework Convention on Tobacco Control, all are signatories of the Agreement on Trade-Related Aspects of Intellectual Property Rights, and all are members of the World Trade Organization. Which legal, economic, social and political differences between the three countries explain their diverse approaches to regulating e-cigarettes? Why have they embraced such dramatically different postures toward e-cigarettes? In seeking to answer those questions, the paper builds on Feeley\u27s legacy of comparative scholarship, policy analysis, and focus on law in action
Neopatrimonialism and Democracy: An Empirical Investigation of Africa's Political Regimes
The Promise, Challenge, and Foundations of Media Collective Action: Illustrations from Sub-Saharan Africa
The Survival of Malawi's Enfeebled Democracy
[T]he image of sure-footed democratic progress must be placed against the picture that emerges from other dimensions of Malawi politics, a picture that presents a more disturbing view and that suggests the prospects for democratic stability and longevity are in question.</jats:p
Authoritarian Origins of Democratic Party Systems in Africa by Rachel Beatty Riedl New York, NY: Cambridge University Press, 2014. Pp. 286. £60 (hbk)
Civil Society and the State in Africa edited by John W. Harbeson, Donald Rothchild, and Naomi Chazan Boulder, CO, and London, Lynne Rienner, 1994. Pp. vii + 312. $45·00. £39·95.
Erin Accampo Hern. Developing States, Shaping Citizenship: Service Delivery and Political Participation in Zambia. Ann Arbor: University of Michigan Press, 2019. xi + 238 pp. List of Tables. List of Figures. Appendix. Index. $24.95. Paper. ISBN: 978-0472054145.
Liberal visions and actual power in grassroots civil society: local churches and women's empowerment in rural Malawi
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