Available Formats
Nested Political Coalitions: Nation, Regime, Program, Cabinet
By (Author) Terrence E. Cook
Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
Praeger Publishers Inc
30th November 2001
United States
Tertiary Education
Non Fiction
324.2
Hardback
232
Cook's principles of coalition politics are really rules of thumb followed by boundedly rational actors, and can predict much coalition politics behavior. Agents prefer to create marginally winning coalitions with like-minded groups in the expectation of receiving rewards commensurate with investments. Four distinct types of coalitions--country, regime, agenda, and cabinet-are explored, along with a thorough examination of current coalition literature. Normally nested, the broader coalitions give rise to narrower ones, revealing diminishing bases of support and duration. Also, barring political catastrophe, change in coalitions at the program or cabinet level usually do not harm, and may actually strengthen, the regime or country coalitions from which they arise.
TERRENCE E. COOK is Professor of Political Science, Washington State University, Pullman, WA.