GOVERNANCE AND LEGITIMACY. PAST IN PRESENT

Governance and legitimacy were two issues that generated long-standing political disputes in Europe. If legitimacy was grounded on the theory of divine rights during the Middle Ages, the idea of representation challenged the whole political system. Kings were interested in preservation of their po...

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Main Author: Dan VELICU
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Nicolae Titulescu University Publishing House 2018-05-01
Series:Challenges of the Knowledge Society
Subjects:
Online Access:http://cks.univnt.ro/uploads/cks_2018_articles/index.php?dir=6_administrative_and_political_sciences%2F&download=CKS_2018_administrative_and_political_sciences_025.pdf
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spelling doaj-2de0017e18d14df5a6ff4de2e1dfa4bb2020-11-24T22:09:28ZengNicolae Titulescu University Publishing HouseChallenges of the Knowledge Society2068-77962068-77962018-05-0112-11731177GOVERNANCE AND LEGITIMACY. PAST IN PRESENTDan VELICU0Lecturer, PhD, Faculty of International Relations and Administration, "Nicolae Titulescu" University, Bucharest (e-mail: dan.velicu@univnt.ro).Governance and legitimacy were two issues that generated long-standing political disputes in Europe. If legitimacy was grounded on the theory of divine rights during the Middle Ages, the idea of representation challenged the whole political system. Kings were interested in preservation of their political power as it was acquired during the earlier centuries meanwhile the parliaments were trying to become not a consultative body, but a legislative body. As a consequence, whenever the spirit of reconciliation of the great political actors lacked, the road to institutional conflict was opened. Sometimes the institutional conflict transformed itself in a civil war as it happened in seventeenth century England. Unfortunately, history proved that many times the constitution didn’t managed to solve the problem. Even though today such a matter has been solved in some democracies in other states, the two concepts have often blocked the good functioning of the central administration. As a special case the Organic Statutes of the Romanian Principalities were designed to set rules for at least some decades. Unfortunately, their authors were able to settle the rules regarding the prince as central authority and the National Assembly. The purpose of this article is to establish the conflicting moments between the two concepts under different constitutional regimes and how they have been solved in the modern history of Romania. http://cks.univnt.ro/uploads/cks_2018_articles/index.php?dir=6_administrative_and_political_sciences%2F&download=CKS_2018_administrative_and_political_sciences_025.pdfgovernancecentral public adiministrationlegitimacygovernparliamentpresidentkingconstitution.
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Dan VELICU
spellingShingle Dan VELICU
GOVERNANCE AND LEGITIMACY. PAST IN PRESENT
Challenges of the Knowledge Society
governance
central public adiministration
legitimacy
govern
parliament
president
king
constitution.
author_facet Dan VELICU
author_sort Dan VELICU
title GOVERNANCE AND LEGITIMACY. PAST IN PRESENT
title_short GOVERNANCE AND LEGITIMACY. PAST IN PRESENT
title_full GOVERNANCE AND LEGITIMACY. PAST IN PRESENT
title_fullStr GOVERNANCE AND LEGITIMACY. PAST IN PRESENT
title_full_unstemmed GOVERNANCE AND LEGITIMACY. PAST IN PRESENT
title_sort governance and legitimacy. past in present
publisher Nicolae Titulescu University Publishing House
series Challenges of the Knowledge Society
issn 2068-7796
2068-7796
publishDate 2018-05-01
description Governance and legitimacy were two issues that generated long-standing political disputes in Europe. If legitimacy was grounded on the theory of divine rights during the Middle Ages, the idea of representation challenged the whole political system. Kings were interested in preservation of their political power as it was acquired during the earlier centuries meanwhile the parliaments were trying to become not a consultative body, but a legislative body. As a consequence, whenever the spirit of reconciliation of the great political actors lacked, the road to institutional conflict was opened. Sometimes the institutional conflict transformed itself in a civil war as it happened in seventeenth century England. Unfortunately, history proved that many times the constitution didn’t managed to solve the problem. Even though today such a matter has been solved in some democracies in other states, the two concepts have often blocked the good functioning of the central administration. As a special case the Organic Statutes of the Romanian Principalities were designed to set rules for at least some decades. Unfortunately, their authors were able to settle the rules regarding the prince as central authority and the National Assembly. The purpose of this article is to establish the conflicting moments between the two concepts under different constitutional regimes and how they have been solved in the modern history of Romania.
topic governance
central public adiministration
legitimacy
govern
parliament
president
king
constitution.
url http://cks.univnt.ro/uploads/cks_2018_articles/index.php?dir=6_administrative_and_political_sciences%2F&download=CKS_2018_administrative_and_political_sciences_025.pdf
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