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Parliament of Bangladesh: Boycotts, business, and change for the better

Amundsen, Inge
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Parliament of Bangladesh: Boycotts, business, and change for the better (429.7Kb)
URI
http://hdl.handle.net/11250/2474907
Date
2012-04-11
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Original version
Bergen: Chr. Michelsen Institute (CMI Brief vol. 11 no. 2) 4 p.  
Abstract
The monumental building of the Parliament of Bangladesh is retracted in a park in the heart of Dhaka, and gives the impression of a powerful institution. In constitutional terms, it is indeed powerful. Bangladesh is among a few developing countries with a parliamentary system; the president is a symbolic figure, and the prime minister and the government is dependent on a parliamentary majority. In reality, however, the executive branch dominates politics in what has been called a “prime-ministerial” system with a parliament “seriously disadvantaged vis-à-vis the executive”. Real politics is made in the prime minister’s office, in the government, and in the ruling party.

For the full report, see the project page

Bangladesh programme page
Publisher
Chr. Michelsen Institute
Series
CMI Brief vol. 11 no. 2

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