Bibtex export
@incollection{ Llanos2023, title = {The Limits of Presidential Impeachment: Lessons from Latin America}, author = {Llanos, Mariana and Marsteintredet, Leiv}, editor = {Llanos, Mariana and Marsteintredet, Leiv}, year = {2023}, booktitle = {Latin America in Times of Turbulence: Presidentialism under Stress}, pages = {17-35}, series = {Routledge Studies in Latin American Politics}, volume = {43}, address = {New York}, publisher = {Routledge}, isbn = {978-1-003-32424-9}, doi = {https://doi.org/10.4324/9781003324249-2}, urn = {https://nbn-resolving.org/urn:nbn:de:0168-ssoar-103122-8}, abstract = {This chapter revisits presidential impeachments in Latin America, an important in-between-election accountability mechanism against presidential misconduct. Since the third wave of democratisation, and especially in the last ten years, congressional pressure and/or legislative votes have become the prevalent way to force a president prematurely out of office. However, the use of impeachment in practice has made apparent the limits of this tool. This chapter assesses such errors and makes a theoretical contribution to the literature in elaborating on them. We name them Type 1 and Type 2 errors, respectively: the first marking an impeachment process that leads to the removal of a president on tenuous grounds, whereas the latter refers to the failure to impeach a president despite their apparent unlawful or undemocratic behaviour. We illustrate these errors with the cases of Peru since 2018 and Brazil since 2019, arguably extreme instances of Types 1 and 2, respectively. Yet, we also show that the solutions that have been presented as alternatives to impeachment may have their own shortcomings, too.}, keywords = {Lateinamerika; Latin America; Staatsoberhaupt; head of state; Innenpolitik; domestic policy; Konflikt; conflict; Gesellschaft; society; Staat; national state; Peru; Peru; Brasilien; Brazil}}