This volume is the first comprehensive analysis of a new type of
executive instability without regime instability in Latin America
referred to as "presidential breakdown." It includes a theoretical
introduction framing the debate within the institutional literature on
democracy and democratization, and the implications of this new type of
executive instability for presidential democracies. Two comparative
chapters analyze the causes, procedures, and outcomes of presidential
breakdowns in a regional perspective, and country studies provide
in-depth analyses of all countries in Latin America that have
experienced one or several presidential breakdowns: Argentina, Bolivia,
Brazil, Dominican Republic, Ecuador, Guatemala, Paraguay, Peru, and
Venezuela. The book also includes an epilogue on the 2009 presidential
crisis in Honduras.