1: Alexander Baturo and Robert Elgie: Presidential Term Limits
2: Peter Stone: Theorizing Presidential Rotation
3: Tom Ginsburg and Zachary Elkins: One Size Does Not Fit All: The
Provision and Interpretation of Presidential Term Limits
4: David Landau, Yaniv Roznai, and Rosalind Dixon: Term Limits and
the Unconstitutional Constitutional Amendment Doctrine: Lessons
from Latin America
5: Alexander Baturo: Continuismo in Comparison: Avoidance,
Extension, and Removal of Presidential Term Limits
6: Leiv Marsteintredet: Presidential Term Limits in Latin America:
ca. 1820-1985
7: Octavio Amorim Neto and Igor P. Acácio: Presidential Term Limits
as a Credible-Commitment Mechanism: The Case of Brazil's Military
Regime
8: Joseph L. Klesner: The Politics of Presidential Term Limits in
Mexico
9: David Close: Presidential term limits in Nicaragua
10: Alessandra Bonci and Francesco Cavatorta: The Politics of
Presidential Term Limits in Tunisia
11: John R. Heilbrunn: Presidential Term Limits in Togo: Electoral
Accountability Postponed
12: Dmitry Nurumov and Vasil Vashchanka: Presidential terms in
Kazakhstan: Less is More?
13: Zhengxu Wang and Anastas Vangeli: China: Limiting and
Regularizing Top Political Power
14: Natasha Ezrow: Term Limits and Succession in Dictatorships
15: Peter VonDoepp: The Politics of Presidential Term Limits in
Malawi
16: Nic Cheeseman: Should I Stay or Should I Go? Term-limits,
elections, and political change in Kenya, Uganda and Zambia
17: Charlotte Heyl: Senegal (1970-2016): Presidential Term Limit
Reforms Never Come Alone
18: Sophia Moestrup: Presidential Term Limits in Burkina Faso
19: Paul Chaisty: The Uses and Abuses of Presidential Term Limits
in Russian Politics
20: Michael J. Korzi: The Politics of Presidential Term Limits in
the US
21: Robert Elgie: Presidential Term Limits in Europe
22: Fiona Yap: Term Limits in South Korea: Promises and Perils
23: Mariana Llanos: The Politics of Presidential Term Limits in
Argentina
24: Juan Muñoz-Portillo and Ilka Treminio: The Politics of
Presidential Term Limits in Central America: Costa Rica, El
Salvador, Guatemala, and Honduras
25: José Antonio Cheibub and Alejandro Medina: The Politics of
Presidential Term Limits in Latin America - From Redemocratization
to Today
26: David Doyle: Presidential Term Limits in Bolivia
27: Christina Murray, Eric Alston and Micha Wiebusch: Presidential
Term Limits and the International Community
28: Akisato Suzuki: Effects of Presidential Term Limits
29: Alexander Baturo and Robert Elgie: What have we learned about
presidential term limits?
Alexander Baturo is Associate Professor of Government, Dublin City
University, Ireland. His research is centered on comparative
democratization, leadership, and the United Nations. His articles
have appeared in such journals as the Journal of Politics,
Comparative Political Studies, British Journal of Political
Science, Political Research Quarterly, and Public Choice. His book,
Democracy, Dictatorship, and Term Limits, was published by the
Michigan
University Press in 2014, and won the 2015 Brian Farrell prize for
the best book from the Political Science Association of Ireland. He
also consults for the international organisations and NGOs; his
research has been
cited, inter alia in the Washington Post, Bloomberg, and Tages
Anzeiger. Robert Elgie is Paddy Moriarty Professor of Government
and International Studies at Dublin City University, Ireland and a
Member of the Royal Irish Academy (RIA). He has published numerous
books, including Semi-presidentialism: Sub-types and Democratic
Performance (OUP, 2011) and Political Leadership: A Pragmatic
Institutionalist Approach (2018). He has published in journals such
as Comparative Political
Studies, British Journal of Political Science, Political Research
Quarterly, and Journal of Democracy. He is the editor of the
journal French Politics, which is published by Palgrave Macmillan,
the Review Editor for
Government and Opposition, as well as the founder and co-editor
with Sona Golder and Shane Martin of the Politics of Institutions
series with Oxford University Press.
Presidential term limits is a central issue worldwide. Should
presidents serve only a limited number of terms to ensure rotation
and that one strong individual does not threaten a country's
democracy? This thorough and informative collection approaches this
question from theoretical, historical, and above all empirical
perspectives. Baturo and Elgie (both, Dublin City Univ., Ireland)
have gathered detailed contextual case studies involving an
interesting balance of older democracies (including the US) and
recent democracies, and autocracies such as China.... Including
comprehensive tables and figures, this volume is required reading
for political scientists.
*A. Siaroff, The University of Lethbridge, CHOICE*
Ask a Question About this Product More... |