Publication Date
2003
Document Type
Dissertation/Thesis
First Advisor
Unger, Danny, 1955-
Degree Name
Ph.D. (Doctor of Philosophy)
Legacy Department
Department of Political Science
LCSH
Thailand--Politics and government--1945-1988; Thailand--Politics and government--1988-
Abstract
Thailand experienced coalitions of short duration from 1979 to 2001. Coalition breakdowns, dissolutions and cabinet reshufflings occurred with frequency. This study examines how multiple parties and multiple intra-party factions have affected the longevity of cabinets and coalitions in the case of Thailand (1979 to 2001). The analysis also situates cabinet and coalition behavior in terms of a three-level game (coalition level, party level, faction level). The study utilizes a transaction cost analysis approach and multivariate regression. The objectives of the analysis are to understand the causes of cabinet and coalition instability in Thailand; to identify the conditions under which either factions or parties are the appropriate unit of analysis in Thai parliamentary politics; and to enhance comparativists' abilities to model cabinet and coalition politics in weakly institutionalized parliamentary democracies with multiple, weakly cohering party systems. While this dissertation assumes that incessant bargaining by either multiple parties or multiple factions hampers cabinet duration, it proposes that factions are more significant than parties in this regard. The findings demonstrate clearly that factions were more significant than parties as the unit of analysis in Thai parliamentary politics during this period.
Recommended Citation
Chambers, Paul, "Factions, parties, coalition change, and cabinet durability in Thailand: 1979 to 2001" (2003). Graduate Research Theses & Dissertations. 3051.
https://huskiecommons.lib.niu.edu/allgraduate-thesesdissertations/3051
Extent
x, 418 pages
Language
eng
Publisher
Northern Illinois University
Rights Statement
In Copyright
Rights Statement 2
NIU theses are protected by copyright. They may be viewed from Huskie Commons for any purpose, but reproduction or distribution in any format is prohibited without the written permission of the authors.
Media Type
Text
Comments
Includes bibliographical references (pages [373]-400).