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Government Formation Model×Coalition Formation Analysis×
ÁreaPolitical EconomyPolitical Economy
FamíliaMCDMMCDM
Ano de origem19891962
Autor originalDavid Baron & John Ferejohn; David Austen-Smith & Jeffrey BanksWilliam Riker; Michael Laver & Norman Schofield
TipoNon-cooperative bargaining model of government formationFormal theory of coalition selection
Fonte seminalBaron, D. P., & Ferejohn, J. A. (1989). Bargaining in Legislatures. American Political Science Review, 83(4), 1181-1206. DOI ↗Riker, W. H. (1962). The Theory of Political Coalitions. Yale University Press. ISBN: 9780300001754
Outros nomesLegislative Bargaining Model, Baron-Ferejohn Model, Formateur Model, Portfolio Allocation ModelMinimal Winning Coalition Theory, Riker Size Principle, Coalition Theory, Government Coalition Analysis
Relacionados44
ResumoThe government formation model is a non-cooperative bargaining theory explaining how a cabinet and the division of its portfolios emerge when no party holds a majority. In the canonical Baron-Ferejohn (1989) framework, a head of state or chance mechanism recognizes one party as formateur with a probability often proportional to its seat share; the formateur proposes a government and an allocation of the spoils of office, and the proposal takes effect only if a legislative majority accepts. Austen-Smith and Banks (1988) embed this in an electoral and coalition setting. The model's signature result is a proposer (formateur) advantage: the party that gets to propose secures a disproportionate share of portfolios.Coalition formation analysis is the formal study of which subset of parties will combine to form a governing or decision-making coalition when no single party commands a majority. William Riker's 1962 The Theory of Political Coalitions supplied the foundational logic: under pure office-seeking, rational politicians form minimal winning coalitions and, by the size principle, the smallest winning coalition possible, so that the spoils of office are divided among as few partners as necessary. Michael Laver and Norman Schofield's 1990 Multiparty Government enriched this with policy-seeking motives, showing that coalitions also tend to be ideologically connected. The framework predicts coalition membership from seat shares and party positions.
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ScholarGateComparar métodos: Government Formation Model · Coalition Formation Analysis. Recuperado em 2026-06-25 de https://scholargate.app/pt/compare