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Patterns of Legislative PoliticsPatterns of Legislative Politics

Patterns of Legislative Politics

Scott Morgenstern

About this book

"Using the United States as a basis of comparison, this book makes extensive use of roll-call data to explore patterns of legislative politics in Argentina, Brazil, Chile, and Uruguay. The patterns are defined by the extent to which parties, factions, delegations, or alliances - what the author collectively terms 'legislative agents' - are unified in their voting and hence are collectively identifiable to voters as being responsible for policy decisions. Then, to develop an indicator of the second central pattern, the book examines the propensity of the legislative agents to form policy coalitions with one another. It shows that agents in Chile and to some extent Uruguay are more coalitional than in Argenta and Brazil, but there is evidence that the agents work with one another in these latter countries as well. The U.S. parties have exhibited an important shift, moving from low levels of unity and frequent bipartisanship toward considerably higher levels of unity and more frequent polarization. In explaining patterns, the book considers the effects of the electoral system, legislators' ideology, cabinet membership, and other variables."--Jacket.

Details

OL Work ID
OL8331736W

Subjects

Legislative bodiesUnited StatesUnited States. CongressVotingWahlsystemLegislative BranchParlementsGovernmentÉtats-UnisVoting registersPOLITICAL SCIENCEProcesso legislativoVoteÉtats-Unis. CongressUnited states, congress

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