Download presentation
Presentation is loading. Please wait.
Published byLinette Newton Modified over 9 years ago
1
NATIONAL POLITICAL INSTITUTIONS,
2
Traditional tripartite division of power: Executive ◦ Strong executives go back to role of Spanish/Portuguese kinds during the reconquest ◦ Center of governmental power since independence in Latin American states ◦ President/dictators tendeded to remain in office for decades in the first century after independence Nation building Violence Monarchical tradition
3
CAUDILLOS Gen. Manuel Rosas (Argentina) ◦ Spain and the adelantados ◦ Tentativeness of imperial power on the large estates ◦ Destruction of central authority in the independence struggle
4
Longevity in power was accompanied by ◦ human rights abuses ◦ Development of cult of personality ◦ Denigration of rules, procedures and the law
5
Rafael Trujillo (Dominican Republic) Diaz in Mexico (1877- 1910) Juan Vicente Gomez in Venezuela (1907 – 1935) Trujillo in the Dominican Republic (1932-1961)
6
◦ Limits on reelection dissipate One additional presidential term becoming more common in “Third Wave” democracies Presidential dictators appear in the twenty- first century?
7
More on the executive Multiple executive a failure (Uruguay) Some experimentation with parliamentary system Brazil (1961-63) Peru – prime minister assists the president in administering the bureaucracy Vice presidents viewed with suspicion Sometimes bypassed when presidency becomes vacant
8
Legislative Argentine National Congress Traditional tripartite division of power Bicameral most common States and regions represented in upper chamber Population based lower chambers
9
UNICAMERAL El Salvador: Legislative Assembly Common in smaller and centralized states Questioning of the utility of upper chamber in Venezuelan constitution of 1999
10
Generally subservient to the executive ◦ Tradition of executive dominance ◦ Personalism is culturally valued Patronage tends to flow from the executive Party discipline of individual legislators Efforts to increase autonomy/power of legislature ◦ Brazil 1992 ◦ Venezuela 1993
11
JUDICIARY Brasilia: Supreme Court of Brazil ◦ National court system Most law based on code model (Roman law modified by Napoleon) Dependent on executive whim in traditional dictatorships Special courts Military (fuero) Labor) ◦ State courts – traditionally tied to local political structure ◦ Municipal courts – relatively minor importance Traffic violations Enforcement of zoning
12
Justices named for a fixed term Writs of AMPARO
13
People’s Power (ombudsman function) Electoral Power ◦ National Electoral Council named through political interaction involving national executive, legislature and political parties ◦ Regional or state electoral councils report to National Electoral Council
14
Federalism Boundaries and powers of regional governments laid out in constitution Characteristic of larger countries Provides some independence for regional leaders Local culture and customs have more influence Often violated in practice
15
Unitary state organization Regional governments administrative subdivisions of national government Regional governments function as administrative subdivisions of the national government Characteristic of small countries Local culture and customs less given less importance El Salvador
16
Decentralization currently in vogue ◦ More participation ◦ More efficiency in resource allocation ◦ Strong resistance continues Opposition to decentralization remains deep- seated ◦ Castro in Cuba ◦ Chavez in Venezuela
Similar presentations
© 2025 SlidePlayer.com Inc.
All rights reserved.