Hostname: page-component-cd9895bd7-lnqnp Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-12-26T18:54:00.324Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

Parliamentary Government in Chile

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  02 September 2013

Extract

In the public life of modern states, political and economic motives of action are so closely interwoven that the student of politics rarely encounters a situation or institution in which he can trace and study purely political principles. Indeed, the struggle for political power and for recognized authority, the effort to give the stamp of public sanction to this or that policy, is always the focus of public life; but the action of the participants in the political drama is determined largely by non-political motives. We have to go back to the Athenean republic or to the Whig rule in eighteenth century England to see the political factor in its clearest and most detached manifestations. It is there that we see a society highly capable and cultivated, concentrating all its attention upon that dramatic struggle for power, that attempt to gain leadership over other men by ascendancy in counsel, which form the true essence of politics. Among modern nations, with their democratic organization, with vast material interests clamoring for attention, purely political considerations are apt to be overshadowed by those of economic and social import, although it always remains interesting to compare and measure nations with regard to their ability to express and deal with the principles of their life in the forms and activities of political counsel.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © American Political Science Association 1909

Access options

Get access to the full version of this content by using one of the access options below. (Log in options will check for institutional or personal access. Content may require purchase if you do not have access.)

References

BIBLIOGRAPHY

Boletin de Sesiones (Senate and Chamber of Deputies).Google Scholar
Constitucion Vigente. Ed. by Larrain, J. Z., 1892.Google Scholar
Reglamento de la Camera de Diputados, 1907.Google Scholar
Acusacion al Ministerio Vicuña.Google Scholar
Convencion del Partido Liberal, 1907.Google Scholar
Newspapers: El Mercurio, El Ferrocarril, La Union, El Diario.Google Scholar
Alfonso, J. A., El Parlamentarismo i la reforma politica en Chile, 1909.Google Scholar
Solar, Domingo Amunátegui, Pajinas Sueltas, 1889.Google Scholar
Amunátegui, M. L., Discursos parlamentarios, vol. ii.Google Scholar
Bulnes, Francisco, El porvenir de les naciones Hispano-Americanos.Google Scholar
Huneeus, , La Constitucion ante el Congreso.Google Scholar
Ibañez, M., El Rejimen parlamentario en Chile, 1908.Google Scholar
Larrain Zanartu, J., Derecho parlamentario de Chile, 1896.Google Scholar
Mac Iver, E., Discursos parlamentarios.Google Scholar
Poirier, E., Chile en 1908, parts ii, and iii.Google Scholar
Valdes Valdes, I., Practicas parlamentarias, 1906.Google Scholar
Subercaseaux, B. Vicuña, Goberantes i Literarios, 1907.Google Scholar
Subercaseaux, B. Vicuña, El Socialismo revolucionario, 1908.Google Scholar
Zegers, Julio, Estudia sobre Don Enrique S. Sanfuentes, 1906.Google Scholar
Zegers, Julio, Memorandum Politico, 1891.Google Scholar
Submit a response

Comments

No Comments have been published for this article.