The quality of democracy revisited: exploring the effects of government alternation and presidential power in Latin America

This dissertation explores two possible causes of the quality of democracy in Latin America: government alternation and presidential power. For that purpose, this work selects 12 of the presidential systems of the Latin American region that will be the focus of the study: Argentina, Bolivia, Brazil,...

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Main Author: Hernandez Gonzalez, Manuel
Format: Thesis (University of Nottingham only)
Language:English
English
Published: 2024
Subjects:
Online Access:https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/79184/
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author Hernandez Gonzalez, Manuel
author_facet Hernandez Gonzalez, Manuel
author_sort Hernandez Gonzalez, Manuel
building Nottingham Research Data Repository
collection Online Access
description This dissertation explores two possible causes of the quality of democracy in Latin America: government alternation and presidential power. For that purpose, this work selects 12 of the presidential systems of the Latin American region that will be the focus of the study: Argentina, Bolivia, Brazil, Chile, Colombia, Costa Rica, Ecuador, Mexico, Paraguay, Peru, Uruguay and Venezuela. The period to be covered is set between 1974 and 2019, using the beginning of the “third wave of democratisation” as the starting point. The unit of analysis that I will observe is the democratic years within the selected period. These years are determined using the criteria of the Varieties of Democracy, Polity IV and Freedom House indexes. This dissertation opens with Chapter 1 as an introduction, in which I formulate the following research question: what are the effects of government alternation and presidential power on the dimensions of the quality of democracy? Then, I develop a literature review that explores the concepts of the quality of democracy, government alternation and presidential power. In turn, this helps me to set my theoretical foundations and is an attempt to identify gaps in the literature. The introductory chapter also proposes the methodology to be quantitative, with analyses done through Structural Equation Modelling. The following three chapters are empirical studies that represent the core of this research. In these, I explore the effects of government alternation and presidential power on the quality of democracy, using three selected dimensions: Chapter 2 delves into vertical accountability, Chapter 3 explores party competitiveness, and Chapter 4 focuses on diffuse regime support. Finally, there is a concluding chapter where I summarise my findings and challenges and make recommendations for future research. The Appendix offers additional data and content for the research. Keywords: democracy, Latin America, quality of democracy, government alternation, presidential power
first_indexed 2025-11-14T21:02:17Z
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institution University of Nottingham Malaysia Campus
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language English
English
last_indexed 2025-11-14T21:02:17Z
publishDate 2024
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repository_type Digital Repository
spelling nottingham-791842025-02-28T15:21:45Z https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/79184/ The quality of democracy revisited: exploring the effects of government alternation and presidential power in Latin America Hernandez Gonzalez, Manuel This dissertation explores two possible causes of the quality of democracy in Latin America: government alternation and presidential power. For that purpose, this work selects 12 of the presidential systems of the Latin American region that will be the focus of the study: Argentina, Bolivia, Brazil, Chile, Colombia, Costa Rica, Ecuador, Mexico, Paraguay, Peru, Uruguay and Venezuela. The period to be covered is set between 1974 and 2019, using the beginning of the “third wave of democratisation” as the starting point. The unit of analysis that I will observe is the democratic years within the selected period. These years are determined using the criteria of the Varieties of Democracy, Polity IV and Freedom House indexes. This dissertation opens with Chapter 1 as an introduction, in which I formulate the following research question: what are the effects of government alternation and presidential power on the dimensions of the quality of democracy? Then, I develop a literature review that explores the concepts of the quality of democracy, government alternation and presidential power. In turn, this helps me to set my theoretical foundations and is an attempt to identify gaps in the literature. The introductory chapter also proposes the methodology to be quantitative, with analyses done through Structural Equation Modelling. The following three chapters are empirical studies that represent the core of this research. In these, I explore the effects of government alternation and presidential power on the quality of democracy, using three selected dimensions: Chapter 2 delves into vertical accountability, Chapter 3 explores party competitiveness, and Chapter 4 focuses on diffuse regime support. Finally, there is a concluding chapter where I summarise my findings and challenges and make recommendations for future research. The Appendix offers additional data and content for the research. Keywords: democracy, Latin America, quality of democracy, government alternation, presidential power 2024-12-12 Thesis (University of Nottingham only) NonPeerReviewed application/pdf en cc_by https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/79184/1/The%20Quality%20of%20democracy%20in%20Latin%20America%20Revisited_Hernandez-Gonzalez_Corrections_20212024.pdf application/pdf en cc_by https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/79184/2/Corrections%20requested_Guide%20for%20Internal%20Examiner_%20Hernandez%20Gonzalez_Manuel_20212024.pdf Hernandez Gonzalez, Manuel (2024) The quality of democracy revisited: exploring the effects of government alternation and presidential power in Latin America. PhD thesis, University of Nottingham. democracy latin american politics government alternation presidential power executive power
spellingShingle democracy
latin american politics
government alternation
presidential power
executive power
Hernandez Gonzalez, Manuel
The quality of democracy revisited: exploring the effects of government alternation and presidential power in Latin America
title The quality of democracy revisited: exploring the effects of government alternation and presidential power in Latin America
title_full The quality of democracy revisited: exploring the effects of government alternation and presidential power in Latin America
title_fullStr The quality of democracy revisited: exploring the effects of government alternation and presidential power in Latin America
title_full_unstemmed The quality of democracy revisited: exploring the effects of government alternation and presidential power in Latin America
title_short The quality of democracy revisited: exploring the effects of government alternation and presidential power in Latin America
title_sort quality of democracy revisited: exploring the effects of government alternation and presidential power in latin america
topic democracy
latin american politics
government alternation
presidential power
executive power
url https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/79184/