Author: Yakobson, Alexander
Title: Elections and Electioneering in Rome: A Study in the Political System of the Late Republic
Review/Collection: "Historia. Einzelschriften", 128
Place edition: Stuttgart
Editor: Franz Steiner Verlag
Year edition: 1999
Pages: 251
Keywords: Droit - Diritto - Law, Histoire - Storia - History, Politique - Politica - Politics
Description: [Abstract] Analyses the Roman electoral system under the late Republic and its impact on the Republican political system as a whole. The political system of the Republic is often described as narrowly oligarchic. All forms of popular participation had little real impact on how the Republic was run. Though this view has been challenged in recent years, the Republican electoral system is still widely regarded as controlled and manipulated by the narrow circle of Roman nobility. Book offers a very different picture: a wide popular electorate, free to choose between upper-class candidates who fiercely competed for the votes of the populace and had to make great efforts in order to win popularity with the common people. Competitive popular elections influenced the whole balance of power between the common people and the elite.
Link: https://books.google.it/books/about/Elections_and_Electioneering_in_Rome.html?id=Zpjd12_kFGYC&redir_esc=y
Author initials: Yakobson 1999
Title: Elections and Electioneering in Rome: A Study in the Political System of the Late Republic
Review/Collection: "Historia. Einzelschriften", 128
Place edition: Stuttgart
Editor: Franz Steiner Verlag
Year edition: 1999
Pages: 251
Keywords: Droit - Diritto - Law, Histoire - Storia - History, Politique - Politica - Politics
Description: [Abstract] Analyses the Roman electoral system under the late Republic and its impact on the Republican political system as a whole. The political system of the Republic is often described as narrowly oligarchic. All forms of popular participation had little real impact on how the Republic was run. Though this view has been challenged in recent years, the Republican electoral system is still widely regarded as controlled and manipulated by the narrow circle of Roman nobility. Book offers a very different picture: a wide popular electorate, free to choose between upper-class candidates who fiercely competed for the votes of the populace and had to make great efforts in order to win popularity with the common people. Competitive popular elections influenced the whole balance of power between the common people and the elite.
Link: https://books.google.it/books/about/Elections_and_Electioneering_in_Rome.html?id=Zpjd12_kFGYC&redir_esc=y
Author initials: Yakobson 1999