This book presents a comparative analysis of the world's political dynasties classified by regime types (monarchic/republican, democratic/non-democratic). It provides a clear survey of dynastic rule and contemporary case studies and explains why dynasties rise, survive, decline, and fall.
Representing the first attempt to topically catalogue theories of dynastic rule, the book brings together and coheres ideas hitherto spread across many disciplines: from history and biography to anthropology, sociology, psychology, economics, political science, and international relations. It provides clear illumination of the dynamics of dynastic rule and how it functions, its rules and maxims, and makes predictions about its future. One quarter of all the states in the contemporary international system today have a family dynasty as head of state or government. Beneath these "national" leaders are other political families who run regional, provincial, and municipal governments, numbering in the tens of thousands. Dynasty is no archaism on the verge of extinction. Every regime type, every historical era, and every geographical region breeds some kind of dynastic rule. Considering how common they are, a review of dynastic theories is long overdue.
This book will be of key interest to students and scholars of political elites, comparative politics, constitutional law, diplomacy, political history, psychology, commonwealth studies, and biography.
Inhaltsverzeichnis
Introduction Part 1: Why Dynasties Rise and Survive 1. Psychological Motivations 2. Biological Nepotism 3. Laws of Inheritance 4. Family Capital 5. Political System 6. Political Culture 7. Social Psychology 8. Colonial Legacy 9. International Relations 10. Globalization Part 2: Why Dynasties Decline and Fall 11. Failed Succession 12. Sibling Rivalry 13. Generational Life Span 14. Revolution 15. Modernization 16. Constitutional Reform 17. Military Defeat 18. Foreign Intervention 19. Coup d'état 20. Electoral Defeat Part 3: Conclusion 21. Methodological Considerations