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The Oxford Handbook of Swiss Politics

Online ISBN:
9780191968013
Print ISBN:
9780192871787
Publisher:
Oxford University Press
Book

The Oxford Handbook of Swiss Politics

Patrick Emmenegger (ed.),
Patrick Emmenegger
(ed.)
Political Science, University of St. Gallen
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Patrick Emmenegger is a professor of comparative political economy and public policy at the University of St Gallen in Switzerland. His research focuses on the political economy of welfare and skills, labour market regulation, industrial relations, democratization, state-building, the politics of taxation, and institutional theory. He has published The Age of Dualization: The Changing Face of Inequality in Deindustrializing Societies (2012, Oxford University Press) and The Power to Dismiss: Trade Unions and the Regulation of Job Security in Western Europe (2014, Oxford University Press).

Flavia Fossati (ed.),
Flavia Fossati
(ed.)
Law, Criminal Justice, and Public Administration, University of Lausanne
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Flavia Fossati is an assistant professor of inequality and integration studies at the University of Lausanne (Switzerland) and at the Swiss Centre of Expertise in Life Course Research (CIR-LIVES). Previously, she has been appointed as an assistant professor of social policy at the University of Vienna. She has been a visiting fellow at EUI and Malmö University. Her research interests include social and immigration policies, deservingness and welfare state chauvinism, and survey experiments. Her research is published in, among others, Cambridge University Press, European Sociological Review, Socio-Economic Review, and International Migration Review. More information can be found here: https://orcid.org/0000-0002-9218-5422.

Silja Häusermann (ed.),
Silja Häusermann
(ed.)
Political Science, University of Zurich
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Silja Häusermann is a professor of political science at the University of Zurich. She studies welfare state politics and party system change in advanced capitalist democracies. She directs the ERC project, ‘welfarepriorities’ and is the co-director of the UZH University Research Priority Programme ‘Equality of Opportunity’. She is the co-editor of The Politics of Advanced Capitalism (Cambridge University Press 2015) and The World Politics of Social Investment Vols I and II (Oxford University Press 2022). More information can be found here: www.siljahaeusermann.org.

Yannis Papadopoulos (ed.),
Yannis Papadopoulos
(ed.)
Political Studies, University of Lausanne
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Yannis Papadopoulos is a professor of Swiss politics and public policy at the Institute of Political Studies of the University of Lausanne and a member of the Laboratory for Analysis and Public Policy (LAGAPE). His research concentrates on recent developments in Swiss policy-making and on the broader implications of governance transformations for accountability and democracy. He has recently published Understanding Accountability in Democratic Governance (Elements series in Public policy, Cambridge University Press 2023) and co-edited the Handbuch der Schweizer Politik-Manuel de la politique suisse (NZZ Libro 2022).

Pascal Sciarini (ed.),
Pascal Sciarini
(ed.)
Political Science and International Relations, University of Geneva
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Pascal Sciarini is a professor of Swiss and comparative politics and dean of the School of Social Sciences at the University of Geneva. His main research topics are decision-making processes, direct democracy, Europeanization, and electoral behaviour. His work has appeared in several journals, such as Comparative Political Studies, The Journal of Politics, British Journal of Political Science, European Journal of Political Research, West European Politics, Electoral Studies, and Social Networks. He is co-author of Political Decision-Making in Switzerland: The Consensus Model under Pressure (Palgrave Macmillan 2015).

Adrian Vatter (ed.)
Adrian Vatter
(ed.)
Political Science, University of Bern
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Adrian Vatter is a full professor of political science (Swiss politics) at the Institute of Political Science, University of Bern. He studied political science and economics at the University of Bern and was professor at the University of Konstanz, Germany (2003–2007) and at the University of Zurich (2008–2009). He has published on Swiss politics, federalism, direct democracy, consensus democracy, subnational politics, and comparative public policy in leading journals. He is the author of Swiss Federalism (Routledge 2018) and Power Diffusion and Democracy (Cambridge University Press 2019; co-authored with Julian Bernauer).

Published online:
18 December 2023
Published in print:
14 December 2023
Online ISBN:
9780191968013
Print ISBN:
9780192871787
Publisher:
Oxford University Press

Abstract

The Oxford Handbook of Swiss Politics provides a comprehensive analysis of the many different facets of the Swiss political system and of the major developments in modern Swiss politics. Its breadth offers analyses relevant not only to political science but also to international relations, European studies, history, sociology, law, and economics. The volume brings together a diverse set of more than fifty leading experts in their respective areas, who explore Switzerland’s distinctive and sometimes intriguing policies and politics at all levels and across many themes. They firmly place them in an international and comparative context and in conversation with the broader scholarly literature. Therefore, this edited collection provides a necessary corrective to the often rather idealized and sometimes outdated perception of Swiss politics. The edited volume presents an account of Swiss politics that recognizes its inherent diversity by taking a thematic approach in seven sections, an introduction, and an epilogue. However, by presenting new arguments, insights, and data, all chapters also make contributions in their own right. The seven sections are foundations (Chapters 2 to 7), institutions (Chapters 8 to 12), cantons and municipalities (Chapters 13 to 15), actors (Chapters 16 to 20), elections and votes (Chapters 21 to 23), decision-making processes (Chapters 24 and 25), public policies (Chapters 26 to 40); and three concluding chapters compose the epilogue (Chapters 41 to 43).

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