parliamentarism
Noun

parliamentarism (uncountable)

  1. The system of government in which the executive branch is legitimised by parliament.
    • 1996, Gerhard Lehbruch, From State of Authority to Network State: The German State in Developmental Perspective, Michio Muramatsu, Frieder Naschold (editors), State and Administration in Japan and Germany: A Comparative Perspective on Continuity and Change, page 49 ↗,
      England was the historical model for the adoption of parliamentarism and party government in Germany.
    • 2000, Mark Hewitson, National Identity and Political Thought in Germany: Wilhelmine Depictions of the French Third Republic, 1890—1914, page 220 ↗,
      German depictions of the Third Republic appeared to warn of the dangers of parliamentarism.
    • 2000, Werner J. Patzelt, What can an Individual MP Do in German Parliamentary Politics?, Reuven Y. Hazan, Lawrence D. Longley (editors), The Uneasy Relationships Between Parliamentary Members and Leaders, page 23 ↗,
      This is why some observers argue that German parliamentarism has degenerated.
    • 2014, Jussi Kurunmäki 7: Rhetoric Against Rhetoric: Swedish Parliamentarism and the Interwar Crisis of Democracy, Kari Palonen, José María Rosales, Tapani Turkka (editors), The Politics of Dissensus: Parliament in Debate, page 181 ↗,
      By the same token, he developed a categorisation of different parliamentarisms, in order to be able to describe Swedish minority cabinets as being parliamentary governments proper.
    • 2016, Pasi Ihalainen, European Parliamentary Experiences from a Conceptual Historical Perspective, Pasi Ihalainen, Cornelia Ilie, Kari Palonen (editors), Parliament and Parliamentarism: A Comparative History of a European Concept, 22 ↗,
      The history part comprises six national or regional (combining the Low Countries and Scandinavia) case studies of discursive processes that have defined parliamentarisms in some formative historical periods.
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