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Caretaker Government
Occurs when an election is called, or an incumbent government either resigns or is defeated in a vote of no confidence. It rules the country for an interim period until a new government is formed
Civil Service System
Refers to the laws that govern the recruitment, retention, and promotion of civilian (non-military) public employees
Clientelism
Refers to the distribution of goods or services that is either (a) not public or (b) not shaped by publicized rules, which is contingent on some form of individual political support
Cohabitation
Having a president from one political bloc and a prime minister from another. Occurs when the party of the president does not control a majority in the legislature and is not represented in the cabinet.
Constituency Service
Refers to non-legislative activities undertaken by legislators (or their staff) on behalf of residents of their districts
Core Voters
Voters who are predisposed in favor of a party on partisan or programmatic grounds
Decentralisation
Refers to the extent to which actual policymaking power lies with the central or regional governments in a country
Delegation
Occurs when one person or group (Principal) relies on another person or group (Agent) to act on the principal's behalf
Descriptive Representation
Characterizes the degree to which representatives resemble and therefore "stand for" their constituents
Duverger's Law
Holds that simple-majority single-ballot systems (FPTP) favor the two-party system
District Magnitude
The number of representatives elected in a district constituency
Electoral Formula
A formula that translates votes into seats or offices
Electoral Threshold
The minimum number of votes a party needs to obtain a seat
Effective Number of Parties
A measure that captures both the number and size of parties in a country
Federalism
A political organization in which the activities of government are divided between a regional and a central government in such a way that each kind of government has some activities on which it makes final decisions
Insurgency
A technology of military conflict characterized by small, lightly armed bands practicing in guerrilla warfare from rural base areas
Minimum Winning Coalition
A coalition where there are no extra parties in addition to those that are required to control the legislative majority
Leas Minimum Winning Coalition
MWC with the lowest number of surplus seats
Legislative Responsibility
A situation in which a legislative majority has the constitutional power, through a vote of no confidence, to remove a government from office without cause
Majoritarian electoral system
One in which candidates or parties that recieve the most votes win office
Mixed Electoral System
One in which voters elect representatives through two different systems, one majoritarian and one proportional
Parliamentary Democracy
If the government depends on a legislative majority to exist, and the head of state is not popularly elected for a fixed term
Party Discipline
Party Discipline is high when all party members in the legislature act and vote cohesively, are on the same page about party policy, and when leaders speak for the party
Party Platform
A formal set of policy goals that is supported by a party or individual candidate in order to appeal to the general public, with the purpose of winning votes
Patronage
Refers to a system in which politicians appoint trusted individuals by discretion to non-elective positions in the public sector
Personal Vote
Occurs when an individual votes based upon the characteristics of a particular candidate rather than the characteristics of the party to which they belong to
Political Cleavage
An alignment between a social cleavage and a political party that endures over time
Presidential Democracy
If the government does not depend on a legislative majority to exist
Primary Election
An election in which voters select a party's candidate for a general election
Principal-agent Problem
Refers to the difficulties that arise when a principal delegates authority to an agent who potentially has different goals from the principal and cannot be perfectly monitored
Proportional Representation (PR)
An electoral system that is a quota- or divisor- based electoral system employed in multimember districts
Proportionality
An electoral system is more proportional if the distribution of seats mirrors the distribution of votes more closely
Semi-Presidential Democracy
If the government depends on the legislative majority to exist, and the head of state is not popularly elected for a fixed term
Strategic Voting
When a voter votes in favor of a less preferred option because they believe that doing so will ultimately produce a more preferred outcome
Substantive Representation
Characterizes the degree to which representatives "act for" their constituents by taking actions in line with their constituents' substantive or ideological interests
Symbolic Representation
Characterizes the meaning that is constructed when representatives "stand for" their constituents
Vote of No Confidence
Generally involves a vote in the legislature on whether a government should remain in office