Exporting Congress?: The Influence of U.S. Congress on World Legislatures
edited by Timothy J. Power and Nicol C. Rae
University of Pittsburgh Press, 2006 eISBN: 978-0-8229-7298-3 | Paper: 978-0-8229-5921-2 Library of Congress Classification JK1021.E96 2006 Dewey Decimal Classification 328
ABOUT THIS BOOK | AUTHOR BIOGRAPHY | REVIEWS | TOC | REQUEST ACCESSIBLE FILE
ABOUT THIS BOOK
The United States Congress is often viewed as the world's most powerful national legislature. To what extent does it serve as a model for other legislative assemblies around the globe? In Exporting Congress? distinguished scholars of comparative legislatures analyze how Congress has influenced elected assemblies in both advanced and transitional democracies. They reveal the barriers to legislative diffusion, the conditions that favor Congress as a model, and the rival institutional influences on legislative development around the world.
Exporting Congress? examines the conditions for the diffusion, selective imitation, and contingent utility of congressional institutions and practices in Canada, the United Kingdom, Germany, the European Parliament, and the new democracies in Latin America and Eastern Europe. These scholars find that diffusion is highly sensitive to history, geography, and other contextual factors, especially the structure of political institutions and the balance of power between the executive and legislative branches. Editors Timothy Power and Nicol Rae place the volume's empirical findings in theoretical, comparative, and historical perspective, and establish a dialogue between the separate subfields of congressional studies and comparative legislatures through the concept of legislative diffusion.
AUTHOR BIOGRAPHY
Timothy J. Power is University Lecturer in Brazilian Studies and Fellow of St. Cross College, University of Oxford. He is the author of The Political Right in Postauthoritarian Brazil and coeditor of Democratic Brazil: Actors, Institutions, and Processes.
Nicol C. Rae is professor of political science at Florida International University. He is the author of <I>Conservative Reformers: The Republican Freshmen and the Lessons of the 104th Congress; Southern Democrats; and <I>The Decline and Fall of Liberal Republicans: 1952 to the Present; and coauthor of Impeaching Clinton: Partisan Strife on Capitol Hill.
REVIEWS
“Because the U.S. looms so large among the nations of the world and the highly transformative U.S. Congress is so powerful within its now venerably stable constitutional order, the expectation naturally arises that other, newer nations will seek to model their legislative institutions on at least some aspects of U.S. practice. The authors of this book have provided a fair test of this expectation in numerous settings, and report largely negative findings. Along the way, however, a reader can gain much focused information about forces shaping the formation of contemporary legislatures all over the globe.”
--Nelson W. Polsby, University of California, Berkeley
“By revealing the unexpected organizational and procedural influence the U.S. Congress has on representative assemblies around the world, Exporting Congress pulls Congress back into the orbit of comparative legislative studies. These essays successfully challenge claims of congressional exceptionalism. Congressional and comparative legislative scholars will have to take note.”
--Peverill Squire, University of Iowa
TABLE OF CONTENTS
< Power and Rae, Contents>
<p. vii, no folio, p. viii, cont'd or blank>
Contents
Acknowledgments 000
Chapter 1
Legislative Diffusion: Can the U.S. Congress Be a Source? 000
Timothy J. Power and Nicol C. Rae
Chapter 2
Reinstitutionalizing the British House of Commons: How Relevant Is the Congressional Model? 000
Nicol C. Rae
Chapter 3
So Close, and Yet So Far: Congressional Influence on Canadian Legislatures 000
Louis Massicotte
Chapter 4
Recorded Votes and Accountability in the United States and Latin American Legislatures 000
John M. Carey
Chapter 5
Limits on Exporting the U.S. Congress Model to Latin America 000
Scott Morgenstern
Chapter 6
The Influence of U.S. Congressional Hearings on Committee Procedure in the German Bundestag 000
Gerhard Loewenberg
Chapter 7
The U.S. Congress's Modest Influence on the Legislatures of Central and Eastern Europe 000
John R. Hibbing and Samuel C. Patterson
Chapter 8
The Environmental Determinants of Legislative Structure: A Comparison of the U.S. House of Representatives and the European Parliament 000
Amie Kreppel
Chapter 9
Ballot Structures and Legislative Behavior: Changing Role Orientations via Electoral Reform 000
Pippa Norris
Chapter 10
Barriers and Carriers: Legislative Diffusion and the Selective Imitation of Congress 000
Timothy J. Power and Nicol C. Rae
Notes 000
Bibliography 000
Contributors 000
Index 000
< Power and Rae, Acknowledgements>
<recto, no folio, verso blank or cont.>
REQUEST ACCESSIBLE FILE
If you are a student who cannot use this book in printed form, BiblioVault may be able to supply you
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Please have the accessibility coordinator at your school fill out this form.
Exporting Congress?: The Influence of U.S. Congress on World Legislatures
edited by Timothy J. Power and Nicol C. Rae
University of Pittsburgh Press, 2006 eISBN: 978-0-8229-7298-3 Paper: 978-0-8229-5921-2
The United States Congress is often viewed as the world's most powerful national legislature. To what extent does it serve as a model for other legislative assemblies around the globe? In Exporting Congress? distinguished scholars of comparative legislatures analyze how Congress has influenced elected assemblies in both advanced and transitional democracies. They reveal the barriers to legislative diffusion, the conditions that favor Congress as a model, and the rival institutional influences on legislative development around the world.
Exporting Congress? examines the conditions for the diffusion, selective imitation, and contingent utility of congressional institutions and practices in Canada, the United Kingdom, Germany, the European Parliament, and the new democracies in Latin America and Eastern Europe. These scholars find that diffusion is highly sensitive to history, geography, and other contextual factors, especially the structure of political institutions and the balance of power between the executive and legislative branches. Editors Timothy Power and Nicol Rae place the volume's empirical findings in theoretical, comparative, and historical perspective, and establish a dialogue between the separate subfields of congressional studies and comparative legislatures through the concept of legislative diffusion.
AUTHOR BIOGRAPHY
Timothy J. Power is University Lecturer in Brazilian Studies and Fellow of St. Cross College, University of Oxford. He is the author of The Political Right in Postauthoritarian Brazil and coeditor of Democratic Brazil: Actors, Institutions, and Processes.
Nicol C. Rae is professor of political science at Florida International University. He is the author of <I>Conservative Reformers: The Republican Freshmen and the Lessons of the 104th Congress; Southern Democrats; and <I>The Decline and Fall of Liberal Republicans: 1952 to the Present; and coauthor of Impeaching Clinton: Partisan Strife on Capitol Hill.
REVIEWS
“Because the U.S. looms so large among the nations of the world and the highly transformative U.S. Congress is so powerful within its now venerably stable constitutional order, the expectation naturally arises that other, newer nations will seek to model their legislative institutions on at least some aspects of U.S. practice. The authors of this book have provided a fair test of this expectation in numerous settings, and report largely negative findings. Along the way, however, a reader can gain much focused information about forces shaping the formation of contemporary legislatures all over the globe.”
--Nelson W. Polsby, University of California, Berkeley
“By revealing the unexpected organizational and procedural influence the U.S. Congress has on representative assemblies around the world, Exporting Congress pulls Congress back into the orbit of comparative legislative studies. These essays successfully challenge claims of congressional exceptionalism. Congressional and comparative legislative scholars will have to take note.”
--Peverill Squire, University of Iowa
TABLE OF CONTENTS
< Power and Rae, Contents>
<p. vii, no folio, p. viii, cont'd or blank>
Contents
Acknowledgments 000
Chapter 1
Legislative Diffusion: Can the U.S. Congress Be a Source? 000
Timothy J. Power and Nicol C. Rae
Chapter 2
Reinstitutionalizing the British House of Commons: How Relevant Is the Congressional Model? 000
Nicol C. Rae
Chapter 3
So Close, and Yet So Far: Congressional Influence on Canadian Legislatures 000
Louis Massicotte
Chapter 4
Recorded Votes and Accountability in the United States and Latin American Legislatures 000
John M. Carey
Chapter 5
Limits on Exporting the U.S. Congress Model to Latin America 000
Scott Morgenstern
Chapter 6
The Influence of U.S. Congressional Hearings on Committee Procedure in the German Bundestag 000
Gerhard Loewenberg
Chapter 7
The U.S. Congress's Modest Influence on the Legislatures of Central and Eastern Europe 000
John R. Hibbing and Samuel C. Patterson
Chapter 8
The Environmental Determinants of Legislative Structure: A Comparison of the U.S. House of Representatives and the European Parliament 000
Amie Kreppel
Chapter 9
Ballot Structures and Legislative Behavior: Changing Role Orientations via Electoral Reform 000
Pippa Norris
Chapter 10
Barriers and Carriers: Legislative Diffusion and the Selective Imitation of Congress 000
Timothy J. Power and Nicol C. Rae
Notes 000
Bibliography 000
Contributors 000
Index 000
< Power and Rae, Acknowledgements>
<recto, no folio, verso blank or cont.>
REQUEST ACCESSIBLE FILE
If you are a student who cannot use this book in printed form, BiblioVault may be able to supply you
with an electronic file for alternative access.
Please have the accessibility coordinator at your school fill out this form.
It can take 2-3 weeks for requests to be filled.
ABOUT THIS BOOK | AUTHOR BIOGRAPHY | REVIEWS | TOC | REQUEST ACCESSIBLE FILE