
Contents
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17.1 Introduction 17.1 Introduction
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17.2 Why Study Post-Executive Activities? 17.2 Why Study Post-Executive Activities?
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17.3 Research Findings 17.3 Research Findings
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17.4 Research Approaches 17.4 Research Approaches
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17.4.1 From an Empiricist-Individualistic to Institutional Analysis 17.4.1 From an Empiricist-Individualistic to Institutional Analysis
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17.4.2 Post-Executive Activities and the Relationship between Different Political Layers 17.4.2 Post-Executive Activities and the Relationship between Different Political Layers
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17.4.3 Presidents and Ministers in ‘Business’ 17.4.3 Presidents and Ministers in ‘Business’
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17.4.4 A Faster Passage from the Executive to the Market 17.4.4 A Faster Passage from the Executive to the Market
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17.5 Future Research Agenda 17.5 Future Research Agenda
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17.6 Conclusion 17.6 Conclusion
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References References
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17 Post-Executive Activities
Get accessFortunato Musella is Full Professor of Political Science at the University of Naples Federico II. He has served on the Italian National Council and on the Editorial Board of the Italian Political Science Review. He is currently a member of the Executive Board of Federica WebLearning, Center for Innovation and Dissemination of Distance Learning, and Principal Investigator for the research of national interest entitled Monocratic Government: The Impact of Persononalisation on Contemporary Political Regimes (Prin 2019–21). His main research interests include the study of government, presidential politics, political parties, and concept analysis. Among his recent publications the volumes Political Leaders beyond Party Politics (Palgrave, 2017), Il Governo in Italia. Profili costituzionali e dinamiche politiche (ed.; il Mulino, 2019), and seventy book chapters and articles published in journals such as European Political Science Review, Representation, Contemporary Italian Politics, Zeitschrift für Vergleichende Politikwissenschaft, Rivista Italiana di Scienza Politica, Quaderni di Scienza Politica.
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Published:06 August 2020
Cite
Abstract
This chapter will focus on political careers of executive members after the end of their term in office, with particular reference to political leaders. After reviewing literature on post-executive political career, it will focus on more recent research directions in this field: (a) the attempt to extend the number of empirical observations by assuming systematic and large-N comparative research; (b) the move from an empiricist-individualistic conception of career patterns to an institutional one; (c) the investigation on new politics-market linkages in democratic regimes coming from the new activism of former leaders. Jointly considering these lines, the final part of the chapter will be devoted to delineate some lines of future research agenda on post-executive patterns and raise crucial questions concerning representative regimes.
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