1.1.2
Strengths & Weaknesses of Weimar Constitution
Strengths and Weaknesses of the Weimar Constitution
Strengths and Weaknesses of the Weimar Constitution
The Weimar Constitution signalled a departure from the Kaiser's Germany. But it was not perfect.
Strengths of the Weimar Constitution
Strengths of the Weimar Constitution
- The strengths of the constitution included:
- It was highly democratic.
- No one party could dominate without over 50% of the vote.
- More people’s interests were reflected in government. The president’s emergency powers could be checked by the Reichstag.
Weaknesses of the Weimar Constitution
Weaknesses of the Weimar Constitution
- Weaknesses of the Weimar Constitution included:
- Germany had no experience of this level of democracy.
- Coalitions gave minority parties the balance of power: it needed the traditional élites and imperial civil service who tended not to support the Weimar Republic.
Historical assessment of the Weimar Constitution
Historical assessment of the Weimar Constitution
- Hite and Hinton (2000):
- ‘The constitution has been described … both as the most democratic in the world and as a major reason why democracy failed in Germany.’
- Carr (1987):
- The problem for Weimar was the traditional élites with their traditional attitudes (anti-republic, pro-authoritarian) wielded too much influence.
- ‘The spirit of Imperial Germany lived on in the unreformed civil service, the judiciary and the office corps.’
1Political & Governmental Change, 1918-1989
1.1Creation & Collapse of Weimar, 1918-1932
1.2Nazi Dictatorship, 1933-1945
1.3Return to Democratic Government, 1945-1989
2Opposition, Control & Consent 1918-1989
2.1Opposition to Government, 1918-1989
2.2Controlling the People, 1918-1989
3Economic Developments & Policies, 1918-1989
3.1Reacting to Economic Challenges, 1918-1932
3.2Controlling the Economy, 1933-1945
3.3Creating the Social Market Economy, 1945-1989
4Aspects of Life, 1918-1989
4.1Attitudes Towards Women, 1918-1989
4.2Education & Cultural Developments, 1918-1989
5Historical Interpretations
5.1Influence of German History
5.2Hitler & Foreign Policy
5.3Contribution of Other Nations to WW2
5.4Reasons for Invading Poland
Jump to other topics
1Political & Governmental Change, 1918-1989
1.1Creation & Collapse of Weimar, 1918-1932
1.2Nazi Dictatorship, 1933-1945
1.3Return to Democratic Government, 1945-1989
2Opposition, Control & Consent 1918-1989
2.1Opposition to Government, 1918-1989
2.2Controlling the People, 1918-1989
3Economic Developments & Policies, 1918-1989
3.1Reacting to Economic Challenges, 1918-1932
3.2Controlling the Economy, 1933-1945
3.3Creating the Social Market Economy, 1945-1989
4Aspects of Life, 1918-1989
4.1Attitudes Towards Women, 1918-1989
4.2Education & Cultural Developments, 1918-1989
5Historical Interpretations
5.1Influence of German History
5.2Hitler & Foreign Policy
5.3Contribution of Other Nations to WW2
5.4Reasons for Invading Poland
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