Macropolitics of Congress

Regular price €46.99
Acknowledgment (creative arts and sciences)
Appellate court
Bipartisanship
Bureaucrat
Cambridge University Press
Category=JPQ
Cloture
Congress
David R. Mayhew
Decision-making
Democracy
Deregulation
Divided government
Dummy variable (statistics)
Economics
Election
Employment
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Estimation
Filibuster in the United States Senate
Government
Government agency
Ideology
Implementation
Institution
Interest rate
Judiciary
Jurisdiction
Lawmaking
Legislation
Legislator
Legislature
Liberal conservatism
Lobbying
Macroeconomics
Measurement
Member of Congress
Midterm election
New institutionalism
Percentage
Policy
Political economy
Political history
Political party
Political science
Politician
Politics
Politics of the United States
Prediction
Probability
Provision (contracting)
Public opinion
Public policy
Rational choice theory
Regime
Regulation
Statistical significance
Statute
Supermajority
Tax
Telecommunication
Theory
Time series
Two-party system
Unemployment
United States congressional committee
Veto
Voting
Woodrow Wilson
World War I
World War II
Yale University

Product details

  • ISBN 9780691121598
  • Weight: 397g
  • Dimensions: 152 x 235mm
  • Publication Date: 26 Feb 2006
  • Publisher: Princeton University Press
  • Publication City/Country: US
  • Product Form: Paperback
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How do public laws, treaties, Senate confirmations, and other legislative achievements help us to gain insight into how our governmental system performs? This well-argued book edited by Scott Adler and John Lapinski is the first to assess our political institutions by looking at what the authors refer to as legislative accomplishment. The book moves beyond current research on Congress that focuses primarily on rules, internal structure, and the microbehavior of individual lawmakers, to look at the mechanisms that govern how policy is enacted and implemented in the United States. It includes essays on topics ranging from those dealing with the microfoundations of congressional output, to large N empirical analyses that assess current theories of lawmaking, to policy-centered case studies. All of the chapters take a Congress-centered perspective on macropolicy while still appreciating the importance of other branches of government in explaining policy accomplishment. The Macropolitics of Congress shines light on promising pathways for the exploration of such key issues as the nature of political representation. It will make a significant contribution to the study of Congress and, more generally, to our understanding of American politics. Contributors include E. Scott Adler, David Brady, Charles M. Cameron, Brandice Canes-Wrone, Robert S. Erikson, Grace R. Freedman, Valerie Heitshusen, John D. Huber, Ira Katznelson, Keith Krehbiel, John S. Lapinski, David Leblang, Michael B. MacKuen, David R. Mayhew, Nolan McCarty, Charles R. Shipan, James A. Stimson, and Garry Young.
E. Scott Adler is Associate Professor of Political Science at the University of Colorado, Boulder. His current research examines the factors that effect legislative activity and specialization by members of Congress over the course of their careers. He has published articles in the "American Journal of Political Science, Legislative Studies Quarterly," and "Urban Affairs Review", and is the author of "Why Congressional Reforms Fail: Reelection and the House Committee System". John S. Lapinski is Assistant Professor of Political Science and Resident Fellow at the Institution for Social and Policy Studies at Yale University. His current research examines how preferences, environmental conditions, and institutional change affect lawmaking. He has published articles in the "American Journal of Political Science", the "Journal of Politics", and the "British Journal of Political Science".