Term limits are a mechanism for governance systems to prevent one elected individual from being in office for an overextended period of time and thus prevent others from participating in governance. They exist as a way to balance power, protect democracy, and prevent dictatorship.
Input: agreement on what type of term limits should be imposed and for what amount of time:
Output: governance system that has regular turnover and is inclusive of new individuals’ voices
In ancient Greece, many Athenian officials under the Boule legislature, or legislature of 500 citizens, were limited to one term, or one year of serving to allow more members of the society to participate in governance. Certain Roman systems also imposed term limits to one year of service for consuls and magistrates.
In the United States, presidential term limits were debated and amendments were drafted more than 200 times between George Washington’s second presidential term to the actual passage of the 22nd amendment in 1951, when Franklin D. Roosevelt’s fourth term raised concerns once again. In fact, term limits were actually omitted from the Articles of Confederation when the Constitution was created. Many democratic republics now impose term limits while parliamentary governments are much less likely to do so.
Many democracies with presidential figures impose term limits, including the U.S., Colombia, Haiti, and within the past three decades, many African countries such as Algeria, Burundi, and the Democratic Republic of Congo.
Concerns for governance systems lacking term limits extend to organizations and corporations as well, as many corporate board positions are seen as lifetime tenures – and this is, for many investors, a cause for concern, as less than 10% of large companies have age or term limits. Nonprofit boards face a similar situation and often limit service to two consecutive terms or six years total.
The Sierra Club constitution, for example, states that: “Each Director shall be elected for a term of three (3) years. A Director may serve for an unlimited number of terms, providing that a minimum period of one year's absence from the Board shall occur after any two (2) consecutive full three-year terms.”
Lenkov, P. (2018). “The Why, When, and How of Board Refreshment.” Forbes.
Nili, Y., Rosenblum, D. (2019). Board Diversity by Term Limits?. 71 Alabama Law Review; Univ. of Wisconsin Legal Studies Research Paper No. 1467.
Baturo, A., & Elgie, R. (Eds.). (2019). The Politics of Presidential Term Limits. Oxford University Press.
Klašnja, M., & Titiunik, R. (2017). The incumbency curse: Weak parties, term limits, and unfulfilled accountability. American Political Science Review, 111(1), 129-148.