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GOVERNMENT AND OPPOSITION VOL: 44 NO 1 (5) answer(s).
 
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1
ID:   086983


Ideology, power orientation and policy drag: explaining the elite politics of Britain's bill of rights debate / Erdos, David   Journal Article
Erdos, David Journal Article
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Publication 2009.
Summary/Abstract Despite a Plethora of Jurisprudential Exegesis. There Remains almost no work examining the politics of the bill of rights debate in Britain from a political science perspective. Such a lacuna is unfortunate not only because this issue has come to occupy an important place within British political debate but also because understanding Bill of Rights developments such as the 1998 Human Rights Act is important in explaining the contours of both judicialization and the rights revolution as they pertain to the British Case.
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2
ID:   086986


Reintroducing a local-level multiparty system in Uganda: why be in opposition? / Muriaas, Ragnhild Louise   Journal Article
Muriaas, Ragnhild Louise Journal Article
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Publication 2009.
Summary/Abstract This Article analyses the dynamics beteen the incumbent movement and the emerging opposition in local communities in Uganda in the months following the referendum in July 2005, in a multiparty system in Uganda.
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3
ID:   086984


Still the anomalous democracy? politics and institutions in Ita / Bull, Martin J; Newell, James L   Journal Article
Bull, Martin J Journal Article
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Publication 2009.
Summary/Abstract Before the 1990's the Italian political system was regarded as anomalous in relation to other western democracies, largely (but not only) on the grounds that it failed to secure genuine alternation in government over a 50-year period.
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4
ID:   086981


Western Ideology / Gamble, Andrew   Journal Article
Gamble, Andrew Journal Article
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Publication 2009.
Summary/Abstract ON the eve of the first world war Leonard Schapiro, Aged Six, was on a train journey from Glasgow to Riga, during which a German official entered the carriage and, seeing the nanny chafing the little boy's feet, exclaimed. Cold feet, cold feet! Soon all Englishmen will have cold feet! The war that was soon to erupt was a war within a civilization, and also a war fought on the German side against the ascendancy of the dominant liberal idea of that civilization, an idea it associated above all with England.
Key Words First World War  England  German  Western Ideology  Cold Feet  Liberal Idea 
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5
ID:   086985


Which candidate selection method is the most democratic? / Rahat, Gideon   Journal Article
Rahat, Gideon Journal Article
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Publication 2009.
Summary/Abstract Scholars of political institutions debate the level to which defferent institutions help or hinder the realization of various democratic principles, but in the case of candidate selection methods there is no such discourse.
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