Home > Subject index > Political Science > Table of contents
Subject: Political Science  Book Title: Compound Democracies
Compound Democracies
Why the United States and Europe Are Becoming Similar
Fabbrini, Sergio , Professor of Political Science and Director of the School of International Studies, Trento University
Print publication date: 2007
Published to Oxford Scholarship Online: May 2008
Print ISBN-13: 978-0-19-923561-2
doi:10.1093/acprof:oso/9780199235612.001.0001
 
Abstract: This book compares the American and European political systems. By deploying a powerful new model to analyse the two systems, it draws some challenging conclusions about their increasing similarity. The book argues that the process of regional integration in Europe over the last sixty years has significantly reduced the historical differences between the democracies on either side of the Atlantic. The EU and the US are now similar because they represent two different species of the same political genus: the compound democracy. The defining feature of compound democracy is the union of states and their citizens. Through such union, the states agree to pool their sovereignty within a larger integrated supra-state or supranational framework. They do so because these unions are primarily pacts for avoiding war. Because the states which made those unions were, and continue to be, asymmetrically correlated, any attempt to create a unified polity — that is a political system where the decision-making power is monopolized by only one institution — is likely to fail. The book goes on to argue that the US and the EU are based on a multiple diffusion of powers which guarantees that any interest can have a voice in the decision-making process, and no majority will be able to control all the institutional levels of the polity. This type of system allows an inter-states organization to operate as a supra-state polity, but it does so at the expense of decision-making capacity and accountability.

Keywords: America, Europe, political systems, European regional integration, compound democracy, sovereignty, supra-state, supranational, war avoidance, diffusion of power
Table of Contents
Preface
You have access to the full text for this item.
1. Introduction: Democratic transformations in Europe and America
You have access to the abstract and full text for this item.     You have access to the full text for this item.
2. Differentiation in authority structures: state, nation, and democracy in Europe and America
You have access to the abstract and full text for this item.     You have access to the full text for this item.
3. Institutionalization of different governmental patterns: separation and fusion of powers in America and Europe
You have access to the abstract and full text for this item.     You have access to the full text for this item.
4. Alternative paths to a modern social order: territoriality, market, and welfare in America and Europe
You have access to the abstract and full text for this item.     You have access to the full text for this item.
5. Different structuring of partisan politics in America and Europe: the role of parties in the political process
You have access to the abstract and full text for this item.     You have access to the full text for this item.
6. American compound democracy and its challenges: the domestic implications of global power
You have access to the abstract and full text for this item.     You have access to the full text for this item.
7. Structural transformation of European politics: the growth of the supranational European Union
You have access to the abstract and full text for this item.     You have access to the full text for this item.
8. Compound democracy in America and Europe: comparing the USA and the EU
You have access to the abstract and full text for this item.     You have access to the full text for this item.
9. The constitutionalization of the US and the EU compound democracies
You have access to the abstract and full text for this item.     You have access to the full text for this item.
10. Conclusion: The puzzle of compound democracy: a comparative perspective
You have access to the abstract and full text for this item.     You have access to the full text for this item.
Bibliography
You have access to the full text for this item.
Index
You have access to the full text for this item.
doi:10.1093/acprof:oso/9780199235612.001.0001
Quick Search Form
 
scroll up fast
scroll up
 
scroll down
scroll down fast
Part I Transatlantic democracies: the era of institutional divergence
Part II Transatlantic democracies: the era of institutional convergence