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Is Bipartisanship Dead?: Policy Agreement and Agenda-Setting in the House of Representatives Harbridge, Laurel (Northwestern University, Illinois)
Is Bipartisanship Dead?: Policy Agreement and Agenda-Setting in the House of Representatives
Harbridge, Laurel (Northwestern University, Illinois)
Why has voting in Congress become so partisan? Does partisanship in voting indicate that there is no common ground left between American parties? Laurel Harbridge's findings in Is Bipartisanship Dead? shed light on whether partisan conflict is insurmountable, underscore how political parties manufacture partisan conflict, and speak to questions of representation and governance.
Marc Notes: Why has voting in Congress become so partisan? Does partisanship in voting indicate that there is no common ground left between American parties? Laurel Harbridge's findings in 'Is Bipartisanship Dead?' shed light on whether partisan conflict is insurmountable, underscore how political parties manufacture partisan conflict, and speak to questions of representation and governance. Brief Description: Is Bipartisanship Dead? strives to shed light on whether partisan conflict is insurmountable, and to answer questions surrounding representation and governance. Table of Contents: 1. Introduction; 2. A puzzle of declining bipartisanship; 3. Strategic partisan agenda setting: a theoretical framework; 4. Agenda setting and the decline of bipartisan cooperation; 5. Variation in strategic partisan agenda setting; 6. Strategic partisan agenda setting across policy areas; 7. District responsiveness and member-party relationships; 8. The past, present, and future of bipartisanship. Review Quotes: "Observers of the legislative process intuit that the rise in congressional partisanship is due to a changing agenda, yet few studies have managed to unpack the black box that is the agenda-setting process. Harbridge documents more directly than other researchers that leaders bring bills to the floor in a selective fashion that leads to more partisan vote outcomes. This book should push scholars to look past the stifling polarization that defines contemporary roll-call voting and understand its origins." Barry Burden, University of Wisconsin, MadisonReview Quotes: "At a time when scholars, pundits, and other commentators are constantly pointing to partisan conflict in Washington, DC, and lamenting its consequences for the health of the American political system, Harbridge offers a fresh and important perspective on the relationships between legislators, party leaders, and their consequences for the appearance, though perhaps not actual incidence, of polarization in Congress. Harbridge offers a compelling argument that suggests that bipartisanship is alive and well in Washington, DC, even though the choices of legislative leaders might lead us to believe that the opposite is true. This book represents a major contribution to the field of legislative studies, and it will go a long way toward helping scholars to understand how party leaders and organizations interact with their members to influence the legislative agenda. Harbridge s findings should change the way that many scholars think about polarization in Congress; and they will help everyday citizens better understand what they observe in contemporary American politics." Alan Wiseman, Vanderbilt University, Tennessee"Review Quotes: "This interesting and important book makes a major contribution to the literature on congressional parties and polarization. Harbridge s argument that observed partisan conflict is in large measure the consequence of strategic choices by parties in constructing the agenda is supported by solid and novel evidence. She also shows that a measure of bipartisanship persists. I expect that this book will be widely assigned in Congress courses, and certainly in mine." David Rohde, Ernestine Friedl Professor of Political Science, Duke University, North Carolina"Review Quotes: "This provocative book looks beyond roll-call votes to understand the rise in partisan conflict in the House of Representatives. Documenting the robust persistence of bipartisanship in pre-floor settings, Harbridge contends that the high levels of party conflict on the contemporary House floor partly reflect the strategic choices of party leaders. Legislative scholars will want to engage with Harbridge s careful and probing analysis." Frances Lee, University of Maryland"Review Quotes: "Politicians and political observers regularly decry the lack of bipartisanship in Congress, claiming that the bipartisan cooperation regularly found in Congresses past has now all but disappeared. Yet despite these claims, scholars have conducted surprisingly little systematic analysis of bipartisanship - until now. In this insightful, nuanced, and thoroughly convincing analysis, Harbridge shows that although bipartisanship on roll-call voting has declined in recent decades, due mainly to strategic choices by party leaders, bipartisanship at other stages of the legislative process continues to persist." Charles Shipan, J. Ira and Nicki Harris Professor of Social Science, University of MichiganReview Quotes: "One truism of American politics is that Congress is hopelessly polarized and mired in gridlock. Laurel Harbridge provides a deeper understanding of why that has happened, while providing evidence that there is more bipartisanship than meets the eye. Polarization is largely created by strategic partisan agenda-setting in which party leaders advance partisan bills over bipartisan alternatives. Harbridge shows that bipartisan legislation continues to be a central part of governance through legislation approved by voice votes and cross-party cosponsorship of legislation. This is essential reading for anyone who wants to understand the partisan divide in Congress." David Canon, University of Wisconsin, Madison"
Contributor Bio: Harbridge, Laurel Laurel Harbridge is an Assistant Professor of Political Science at Northwestern University and a faculty fellow at the Institute for Policy Research. Her teaching and research focus on legislative politics, partisan conflict, and the lack of bipartisan agreement in American politics. She is a former Hoover Institution national fellow. Her work has been published in the American Journal of Political Science, Legislative Studies Quarterly, and American Politics Research.
| Medios de comunicación | Libros Hardcover Book (Libro con lomo y cubierta duros) |
| Publicado | 16 de marzo de 2015 |
| ISBN13 | 9781107079953 |
| Editores | Cambridge University Press |
| Páginas | 267 |
| Dimensiones | 161 × 236 × 24 mm · 542 g |
| Lengua | Inglés |