Issues Concerning Government’s Formation and Functioning in Romania after 1989 Cover Image

Probleme privind formarea şi funcţionarea guvernului în România după 1989
Issues Concerning Government’s Formation and Functioning in Romania after 1989

Author(s): Ciprian Iftimoaei
Subject(s): Law, Constitution, Jurisprudence
Published by: Editura Lumen, Asociatia Lumen
Keywords: Government; governance; governmental elites; conflict; consensus; governmental dimension and stability; democratic consolidation

Summary/Abstract: Government is one of the most important and distinct state institutions, the one who carries out the country's domestic and foreign policy, exercising general management of the government. This important political institution is located closest to the citizens, both by central structures and by the local, administrative activity. The analysis of the government in the constitutional architecture of Postcommunist Romania will focus on legislative issues concerning the government’s formation and functioning, the "infra-executive" relationship (between the government and the presidency), conflictual aspects of postcommunist governments, and the impact of government’s size on the political related to the hystorical perioad after 1989. Also, the analysis will include the quantitative aspects of governance (government formulas, dimensions of post-revolutionary governments, the number of governmental portfolios, intergovernmental mobility). A major source of conflict within the executive is generated by the configuration mode and running a coalition government. As we shall see, political consensus is the exception rather than the rule in the functioning of the coalition government in Romania, and when done often rely on "compromises compromising". The size and stability of the government are two issues that are dealt with political science and closely related to the types of cabinets and coalitions. The size of the cabinet depends on many factors including the complexity of governance issues that need to be answered in terms of administration and public policy, and the number and share of parties making up the coalition. In Postcommunist Romania, partidocracy defeated democracy and poor governance has become commonplace rather than the exception.

  • Issue Year: 2014
  • Issue No: 14
  • Page Range: 263-307
  • Page Count: 1
  • Language: Romanian