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US federalism grants state legislators the authority to design many
aspects of election administration, including ballot features that
mediate how citizens understand and engage with the choices
available to them when casting their votes. Seemingly innocuous
features in the physical design of ballots, such as the option to
cast a straight ticket with a single checkmark, can have
significant aggregate effects. Drawing on theoretical insights from
behavioral economics and extensive data on state ballot laws from
1888 to the present, as well as in-depth case studies, this book
shows how strategic politicians use ballot design to influence
voting and elections, drawing comparisons across different periods
in American history with varying levels of partisanship and
contention. Engstrom and Roberts demonstrate the sweeping impact of
ballot design on voting, elections, and democratic representation.
US federalism grants state legislators the authority to design many
aspects of election administration, including ballot features that
mediate how citizens understand and engage with the choices
available to them when casting their votes. Seemingly innocuous
features in the physical design of ballots, such as the option to
cast a straight ticket with a single checkmark, can have
significant aggregate effects. Drawing on theoretical insights from
behavioral economics and extensive data on state ballot laws from
1888 to the present, as well as in-depth case studies, this book
shows how strategic politicians use ballot design to influence
voting and elections, drawing comparisons across different periods
in American history with varying levels of partisanship and
contention. Engstrom and Roberts demonstrate the sweeping impact of
ballot design on voting, elections, and democratic representation.
The tenth edition of this respected textbook provides a fresh
perspective and a crisp introduction to congressional politics.
Informed by the authors' Capitol Hill experience and scholarship,
the new edition reflects changes in Congress resulting from the
2018 elections and such developments as (a) a new majority party in
the House; (b) new campaign spending numbers and election outcomes,
rules, committees, leaders, and budget developments; and (c) recent
political science literature that provides new perspectives on the
institution. The text emphasizes the recent developments and
includes important learning aids, including lists of key term,
discussion questions and suggested further reading. Alongside clear
explanations of congressional rules and the lawmaking process there
are examples from contemporary events and debates that highlight
Congress as a group of politicians as well as a lawmaking body.
The American Congress provides the most current treatment of
congressional politics available in an undergraduate text. Informed
by the authors' Capitol Hill experience and scholarship, this book
presents a crisp introduction to major features of Congress:
parties and committee systems, leadership, voting and floor
activity. This text contains discussions of the importance of
presidents, courts and interest groups in congressional policy
making. Recent developments are also discussed within the context
of congressional political history. The seventh edition includes
complete coverage of the first Congress of the Obama presidency,
the 2010 midterm elections, healthcare reform and an early
perspective on the 112th Congress with a Republican majority.
The American Congress Reader provides a supplement to the popular
and newly updated American Congress undergraduate textbook. By the
same authors who drew upon Capitol Hill experience and nationally
recognized scholarship to present a crisp introduction and analysis
of Congress's inner mechanics, the Reader compiles the best
relevant scholarship on party and committee systems, leadership,
voting, and floor activity to broaden and illuminate the key
features of the text.
Current research on the U.S. House of Representatives largely
focuses on the effects of partisanship, but the strikingly less
frequent studies of the Senate still tend to treat parties as
secondary considerations in a chamber that gives its members far
more individual leverage than congressmen have. In response to the
recent increase in senatorial partisanship, "Why Not Parties?"
corrects this imbalance with a series of original essays that focus
exclusively on the effects of parties in the workings of the upper
chamber.Illuminating the growing significance of these effects, the
contributors explore three major areas, including the electoral
foundations of parties, partisan procedural advantage, and partisan
implications for policy. In the process, they investigate such
issues as whether party discipline can overcome Senate mechanisms
that invest the most power in individuals and small groups; how
parties influence the making of legislation and the distribution of
pork; and whether voters punish senators for not toeing party
lines. The result is a timely corrective to the notion that parties
don't matter in the Senate - which the contributors reveal is far
more similar to the lower chamber than conventional wisdom
suggests.
The ninth edition of this respected textbook provides a fresh
perspective and a crisp introduction to congressional politics.
Informed by the authors' Capitol Hill experience and scholarship,
the new edition reflects changes resulting from the November 2014
elections and such developments as (a) a new majority party in the
Senate, (b) new campaign spending numbers and election outcomes,
rules, committees, leaders, and budget developments, and (c) recent
political science literature that provides new perspectives on the
institution. The text emphasizes the importance of a strong
legislature and has discussion questions and further reading.
Alongside clear explanations of congressional rules and the
law-making process, there are examples from contemporary events and
debates that highlight Congress as a group of politicians as well
as a law-making body. These recent developments are presented
within the context of congressional political history.
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