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By whatever name they are known (Parliaments, Legislatures, or
Assemblies, to name but three) legislative assemblies in democratic
societies face the twin challenges of institutional capacity and
accountability to their citizens. In addressing these challenges,
assemblies vary in the extent to which they serve the respective
interests of three critical sets of actors: their members, party
leaders, and voters. In this book, Shane Martin and Kaare W. Strøm
identify three ideal types of democratic assemblies - the members'
assembly, the leaders' assembly, and the voters' assembly - and
analyze national legislative assemblies in the world's 68 most
populous democracies, from Finland to Papua New Guinea, in light of
these models. Based on extensive new cross-national data, they
trace the implications of the three assembly types for the design,
internal organization, resources, and powers of democratic national
assemblies, develop indices of each assembly type, and score each
of the 68 legislative assemblies on these indices. The analysis of
legislative re-election rates in these countries reveals that the
fate of incumbents depends on member resources as well as on
leadership control, but is ultimately constrained by voter
confidence. In conclusion, the authors discuss the past and future
trajectories of legislative assemblies, including their
susceptibility to democratic backsliding.
By whatever name they are known (Parliaments, Legislatures, or
Assemblies, to name but three) legislative assemblies in democratic
societies face the twin challenges of institutional capacity and
accountability to their citizens. In addressing these challenges,
assemblies vary in the extent to which they serve the respective
interests of three critical sets of actors: their members, party
leaders, and voters. In this book, Shane Martin and Kaare W. Strøm
identify three ideal types of democratic assemblies - the members'
assembly, the leaders' assembly, and the voters' assembly - and
analyze national legislative assemblies in the world's 68 most
populous democracies, from Finland to Papua New Guinea, in light of
these models. Based on extensive new cross-national data, they
trace the implications of the three assembly types for the design,
internal organization, resources, and powers of democratic national
assemblies, develop indices of each assembly type, and score each
of the 68 legislative assemblies on these indices. The analysis of
legislative re-election rates in these countries reveals that the
fate of incumbents depends on member resources as well as on
leadership control, but is ultimately constrained by voter
confidence. In conclusion, the authors discuss the past and future
trajectories of legislative assemblies, including their
susceptibility to democratic backsliding.
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