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  1. parliamentary system, or premier-presidential system, is a system of government in which a president and a prime minister are both active participants in the day-to-day administration of the state It differs from a parliamentary republic in that it has a popularly elected head of state who is more than a purely ceremonial figurehead. It differs ...

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  2. A main difference between the presidential and the parliamentary systems of governance is as a result of how that states executive, legislative and judiciary organs are organized. The author analyzes the contemporary models of government, including the Macedonian one, through the relations between legislative and executive, at normative level ...

    • Chiku Shou
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  4. most analysts its system of government is semi-presidential or parliamentary. In 1988, Finland instituted a new system for presidential elections. If one candidate wins a majority of personal votes in the presidential election, he/she is directly elected. The electoral college now meets only if there is no majority winner.

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  5. Parliamentary and Presidential Democracies: Probit Analysis 83 4.5 Relative Size of the Government Head’s Party in the Lower (or Only) Legislative House 84 4.6 Government Legislative Success in Parliamentary and Presidential Democracies by Legislative Situation and Government Status 89 4.7 Determinants of Legislative Effectiveness in Democratic

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  6. stabilize the government in a parliamentary system (such as fixed terms), government instabilities may induce extra-constitutional measures to resolve the crisis,” for example, in Thailand, there is a correlation between grievances and attempts ousting the incumbent government through votes of no confidence and the coups that followed.5

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  7. Another difference between parliamentary and presidential systems of government relates to the. nature of the executive. While in parliamentary govern ments, as the British model exemplifies, the executive is fragmented (that is, it is divided into a head of govern. ment, cabinet, and a head of state), presidential.

  8. A presidential system is a form of government in a republican state. From this perspective, it is an alternative to monarchy. However, its historical origins and theoretical background are found in monarchical government. The idea that one and the same person holds the offices of head of state and head of government is akin to both presidential ...

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