TY - JOUR
T1 - Portuguese ministers, 1851-1999
T2 - Social background and paths to power
AU - de Almeida, Pedro Tavares
AU - Pinto, António Costa
PY - 2002
Y1 - 2002
N2 - This study provides an empirical analysis of the impact of regime changes on the composition and patterns of recruitment of the Portuguese ministerial elite throughout the last 150 years. The 'out-of-type', violent nature of most regime transformations accounts for the purges in and the extensive replacements of the political personnel, namely of the uppermost officeholders. In the case of Cabinet members, such discontinuities did not imply, however, radical changes in their social profile. Although there were some significant variations, a series of salient characteristics has persisted over time. The typical Portuguese minister is a male in his mid-forties, of middle-class origin and predominantly urban-born, highly educated and with a state servant background. The two main occupational contingents have been that of the university professors - except for the First Republic (1910-26) - and the military, the latter having only eclipsed with the consolidation of contemporary democracy. As regards career pathways, the most striking feature is the secular trend for the declining role of parliamentary experience, which the democratic regime did not clearly reverse. In this period, a technocratic background rather than political experience has been indeed the privileged credential for a significant proportion of ministers.
AB - This study provides an empirical analysis of the impact of regime changes on the composition and patterns of recruitment of the Portuguese ministerial elite throughout the last 150 years. The 'out-of-type', violent nature of most regime transformations accounts for the purges in and the extensive replacements of the political personnel, namely of the uppermost officeholders. In the case of Cabinet members, such discontinuities did not imply, however, radical changes in their social profile. Although there were some significant variations, a series of salient characteristics has persisted over time. The typical Portuguese minister is a male in his mid-forties, of middle-class origin and predominantly urban-born, highly educated and with a state servant background. The two main occupational contingents have been that of the university professors - except for the First Republic (1910-26) - and the military, the latter having only eclipsed with the consolidation of contemporary democracy. As regards career pathways, the most striking feature is the secular trend for the declining role of parliamentary experience, which the democratic regime did not clearly reverse. In this period, a technocratic background rather than political experience has been indeed the privileged credential for a significant proportion of ministers.
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=0041814639&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1080/13608740708539625
DO - 10.1080/13608740708539625
M3 - Article
AN - SCOPUS:0041814639
SN - 1360-8746
VL - 7
SP - 5
EP - 40
JO - South European Society and Politics
JF - South European Society and Politics
IS - 2
ER -