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Bolger, Daniel, Thomson, Robert, and Ecklund, Elaine Howard
Social Science Quarterly (Wiley-Blackwell) . Jan2021, Vol. 102 Issue 1, p324-342. 19p. 3 Charts.
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SOCIOCULTURAL factors, UNITED States presidential election, 2016, POLITICAL campaigns, and UNITED States politics & government, 2017-2021
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Objectives: The political discourse surrounding the 2016 U.S. presidential election highlighted discontent with both Congress and corporations, a reality corroborated in recent scholarship highlighting declines in institutional confidence among U.S. citizens. Here we test theories of institutional confidence to understand the social and cultural determinants of confidence in Congress and corporations prior to the start of the 2016 presidential campaigns. Methods: We draw on data from the Religious Understandings of Science Survey, a nationally representative survey conducted in 2013–2014 (N = 9,416). Results: We find that political ideology largely explained confidence in corporations while social location (particularly racial‐ethnic identity and gender) strongly related to confidence in Congress. Seemingly opposing factors converged to predict trust in both institutions. Conclusions: Institutional confidence is shaped not only by social and cultural factors but also by the symbolic functions of institutions themselves. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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2. Elections and Policy Responsiveness: Evidence from Environmental Voting in the U.S. Congress. [2020]
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McAlexander, Richard J. and Urpelainen, Johannes
Review of Policy Research . Jan2020, Vol. 37 Issue 1, p39-63. 25p. 4 Charts, 3 Graphs.
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ENVIRONMENTAL policy, UNITED States elections, VOTING, and LEGISLATORS
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Do elections affect legislators' voting patterns? We investigate this question in the context of environmental policy in the U.S. Congress. We theorize that since the general public is generally in favor of legislation protecting the environment, legislators have an incentive to favor the public over industry and vote for pro‐environment legislation at election time. The argument is supported by analyses of data on environmental roll call votes for the U.S. Congress from 1970 to 2013 where we estimate the likelihood of casting a pro‐environment vote as a function of the time to an election. While Democrats are generally more likely to cast a pro‐environment vote before an election, this effect is much stronger for Republicans when the legislator won the previous election by a thinner margin. The election effect is maximized for candidates receiving substantial campaign contributions from the (anti‐environment) oil and gas industry. Analysis of Twitter data confirms that Congressmembers make pro‐environmental statements and highlight their roll call voting behavior during the election season. These results show that legislators do strategically adjust their voting behavior to favor the public immediate prior to an election. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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Maher, Thomas V., Seguin, Charles, Zhang, Yongjun, and Davis, Andrew P.
PLoS ONE . 3/25/2020, Vol. 15 Issue 3, p1-13. 13p.
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SOCIAL scientists, POLITICAL scientists, CIVIL service positions, CONGRESSIONAL hearings (U.S.), and RESEARCH institutes
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Congressional hearings are a venue in which social scientists present their views and analyses before lawmakers in the United States, however quantitative data on their representation has been lacking. We present new, publicly available, data on the rates at which anthropologists, economists, political scientists, psychologists, and sociologists appeared before United States congressional hearings from 1946 through 2016. We show that social scientists were present at some 10,347 hearings and testified 15,506 times. Economists testify before the US Congress far more often than other social scientists, and constitute a larger proportion of the social scientists testifying in industry and government positions. We find that social scientists' testimony is increasingly on behalf of think tanks; political scientists, in particular, have gained much more representation through think tanks. Sociology, and psychology's representation before Congress has declined considerably beginning in the 1980s. Anthropologists were the least represented. These findings show that academics are representing a more diverse set of organizations, but economists continue to be far more represented than other disciplines before the US Congress. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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Lee, Jongkon
Policy Studies . May-Jul2022, Vol. 43 Issue 4, p659-675. 17p. 2 Charts, 1 Graph.
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GENDER, WOMEN legislators, WOMEN'S rights, VIOLENCE against women, and ABORTION laws
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As critical mass theorists have argued, the number of female legislators is important in the enactment of gender-status laws. Female legislators share strong beliefs on women's rights and have easily coordinated their legislative activities on gender issues. In addition, their strong coordination and consequent political influence have often allowed them to form a legislative majority by influencing male legislators. Gender policies, however, are frequently associated with non-gender policy dimensions on which female legislators tend to have different ideas. Thus, when a gender issue is interpreted in terms of a conspicuous non-gender policy dimension, critical mass theory may not work properly; the heterogeneity of female legislators regarding non-gender policy dimensions can weaken their legislative coordination, thereby hampering gender-status lawmaking. This article examines these propositions by reviewing the legislative histories of violence against women and the legality of abortion in the United States. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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Lin, Gang, Zhou, Wenxing, and Wu, Weixu
Journal of Contemporary China . Jul2022, Vol. 31 Issue 136, p609-625. 17p. 5 Charts, 1 Graph.
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QUANTITATIVE research, LEGISLATION, ACTIVISM, GOVERNMENTALITY, and CHINA-United States relations
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Through a quantitative analysis of Taiwan–related legislation between 1979 and 2020, the article finds that the degree of Taiwan–related legislation is significantly correlated with the degree of tension in U.S.—China relations. While a deteriorating cross–Taiwan Strait relationship is clearly associated with the increasing legislative activities for the sake of Taiwan, an improving relationship from the state of fair to good cannot guarantee a decrease of such activities. A unified government and the extent of the Taiwan lobby are both helpful in passing pro–Taiwan acts but statistically insignificant. A content analysis of pro–Taiwan bills approved by the Trump administration suggests a creeping movement to "normalize" U.S–Taiwan relations with congressional activism and the less-restrained White House as a co–engine. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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6. Critical Mass Claims and Ideological Divides Among Women in the U.S. House of Representatives. [2022]
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Tate, Katherine and Arend, Mary
American Politics Research . Jul2022, Vol. 50 Issue 4, p479-487. 9p.
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YOUNG women, CRITICAL theory, BABY boom generation, and ELECTIONS
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Critical mass theories predict that women in government will sponsor and vote for more women and feminist bills as their numbers increase. Using Voteview.com data of roll-call votes measuring left–right ideology from 1977 to 2019 this paper shows that ideological divides among women in the U.S. House of Representatives have deepened rather than veered in a liberal direction. Republican women have moved rightward over time and more conservative ones are winning elections. Belonging to a politicized generation, older Silent Generation and Boomer women are more ideologically extreme than younger women. Parties are also elevating their more ideological female members. As their numbers increase, female House members are expected to remain ideologically diverse in a polarized legislative environment. Critical mass theories are deficient in failing to place female political actors in a dynamic workplace. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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Falati, Shahrokh
Texas Intellectual Property Law Journal . 2019, Vol. 28 Issue 1, p1-52. 52p.
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PATENT law, MAYO Collaborative Services v. Prometheus Laboratories, and PATENTABILITY -- Lawsuits & claims
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In this article, the author argues that the U.S. Congress should abolish the Supreme Court promulgated, non-statutory exceptions to 35 U.S.C. section 101 of the Patent Act. It mentions about the U.S. Supreme Court case Mayo Collaborative Sers. v. Prometheus Labs., Inc. in which the court held that claims directed to a method of giving a drug to a patient, measuring metabolites of that drug, deciding whether to increase or decrease the dosage of the drug, were not patent-eligible subject matter.
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Collette, Matthew D. and Nahshon, Ken
Journal of Ship Research . Jun2022, Vol. 66 Issue 2, p109-126. 18p.
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FLOOD damage, AMERICAN Civil War, 1861-1865, DYNAMIC loads, and NAVAL architecture
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The submarine H. L. Hunley conducted the first successful submarine attack on an enemy vessel, USS Housatonic, during the American Civil War but was lost with all hands because of unknown circumstances. The submarine has been recovered, and recent archeological findings have uncovered that a spar torpedo was used as opposed to a standoff torpedo that was commonly assumed to have been used. As a result, the submarine would have been in close proximity to the weapon when it exploded than previously thought. A multipart investigation has been conducted with the goal of determining if this reduced standoff distance could explain the mysterious loss of the vessel in the minutes or hours after the attack. Here, the results of a bottom-up naval architectural and weapons-effects analysis are reported. Together, the experimental, computational, and analytical results provide new insight to the vessel's stability characteristics, propulsion, and dynamic loading environment during the attack. In addition, a discussion of possible loss scenarios, informed by both calculation results and inspections of vessel's hull, is presented. Although the story of what happened to H. L. Hunley that night remains shrouded in mystery after this work, several important new research questions emerge. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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9. No Balance, No Problem: Evidence of Partisan Voting in the 2021 Georgia U.S. Senate Runoffs. [2022]
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Algara, Carlos, Hale, Isaac, and Struthers, Cory L.
American Politics Research . Jul2022, Vol. 50 Issue 4, p443-463. 21p.
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RUNOFF elections, ELECTIONS, PARTISANSHIP, DEMOCRATS (United States), VOTING, PRESIDENTIAL elections, and FEDERAL government
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Recent work on American presidential elections suggests that voters engage in anticipatory balancing, which occurs when voters split their ticket in order to moderate collective policy outcomes by forcing agreement among institutions controlled by opposing parties. We use the 2021 Georgia U.S. Senate runoffs, which determined whether Democrats would have unified control of the federal government given preceding November victories by President-elect Biden and House Democrats, to evaluate support for anticipatory balancing. Leveraging an original survey of Georgia voters, we find no evidence of balancing within the general electorate and among partisans across differing model specifications. We use qualitative content analysis of voter electoral runoff intentions to support our findings and contextualize the lack of evidence for balancing withan original analysis showing the unprecedented partisan nature of contemporary Senate elections since direct-election began in 1914. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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Social Science Quarterly (Wiley-Blackwell) . May2022, Vol. 103 Issue 3, p622-634. 13p. 2 Charts, 2 Graphs.
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PARTISANSHIP, ELECTIONS, POLARIZATION (Social sciences), INCUMBENCY (Public officers), and MOTIVATION (Psychology)
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Objective: This article explores whether voters evaluate candidates' ideology, partisanship, and quality independently or exhibit behavior consistent with motivating reasoning, rating co‐partisans and candidates ideologically similar to themselves as more competent. Methods: Using a survey of voters and experts from 2010 U.S. House elections, I estimate a model predicting an individual's rating of incumbent candidate competence for office and challenger candidate competence for office. Results: Individuals ideologically distant from a candidate rate the candidate as less competent, yet rate co‐partisan candidates as more competent. For incumbents, opposing partisanship amplifies the negative effect of ideological distance on candidate quality ratings, and shared partisanship mitigates the negative effect of ideological distance. Conclusion: Only incumbents rated as the most competent can overcome the ideological and partisan biases of voters. Consistent with theories of affective polarization, these results imply that polarization runs deeper than partisan or ideological differences–it is personal. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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Reynolds, Molly E.
Forum (2194-6183) . Feb2022, Vol. 19 Issue 4, p629-647. 19p.
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BUDGET reconciliation, RECONCILIATION, and CHICKENS
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Since its early uses in the early 1980s, the budget reconciliation process has played an important role in how the U.S. Congress legislates. Because the procedures protect certain legislation from a filibuster in the Senate, the reconciliation rules both shape, and are shaped by, the upper chamber in significant ways. After providing a brief overview of the process, I discuss first how partisanship in the Senate has affected the use of the reconciliation procedures. Next, I describe two sets of consequences of the contemporary reconciliation process, on negotiation and on policy design. I conclude with some observations about the relationship of reconciliation to the prospects for broader procedural change in the Senate. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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12. Senator Dennis Deconcini and the Battle for Bosnia on Capitol Hill in Washington, D.C., U.S.A. [2022]
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Karčić, Hamza
Journal of Muslim Minority Affairs . Mar2022, Vol. 42 Issue 1, p1-10. 10p.
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UNITED States senators, SELF-defense, ARCHIVES, and INTERNATIONAL relations
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The aim of this paper is to analyze the role of former Arizona senator Dennis DeConcini during the Bosnian War. DeConcini, along with other congressional Bosnia hawks, supported the newly independent country in its self-defense during the 1992–1995 war. DeConcini's activism was mainly through the U.S. Helsinki Commission but he also undertook a number of steps with a view to legislative American foreign policy towards Bosnia in the early 1990s. Based on the congressional archive and DeConcini's papers at the University of Arizona, this article will piece together the story of how an Arizona senator became a champion of Bosnia on Capitol Hill. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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Algara, Carlos and Johnston, Savannah
Forum (2194-6183) . Feb2022, Vol. 19 Issue 4, p549-583. 35p.
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POLARIZATION (Social sciences), POLICY sciences, RUNOFF elections, ELECTIONS, MAJORITIES, PARTISANSHIP, and PRESIDENTIAL candidates
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The dramatic Democratic victories in the 2021 Georgia U.S. Senate runoffs handed Democrats their first majority since 2015 and, with this, unified Democratic control of Washington for the first time since 2011. While Democratic Leaders and President Joe Biden crafted their agenda, any hope of policy passage rested on complete unity in a 50–50 Senate and a narrow majority in the U.S. House. Against this backdrop, the 117th Senate is the most polarized since direct-election began in 1914 and, by popular accounts, the least deliberative in a generation. In this article, we examine the implications of partisan polarization for policymaking in the U.S. Senate throughout the direct-election era. First, we show that greater polarization coincides with more partisan Senate election outcomes, congruent with recent trends in the House. Today, over 90% of Senators represent states carried by their party's presidential nominee. Secondly, we show that polarization coincides with higher levels of observable obstruction, conflict, partisan unity, and narrower majorities. Lastly, we show that this polarization coincides with lower levels of deliberation in the form of consideration of floor amendments and committee meetings. Taken together, we paint a picture of a polarized Senate that is more partisan, more obstructionist, and less deliberative. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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Ladewig, Jeffrey W.
Political Research Quarterly . Sep2021, Vol. 74 Issue 3, p599-614. 16p.
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INCOME distribution, PARTISANSHIP, and UNITED States legislators
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Over the past twenty years, there has been much discussion about two of the most important recent trends in American politics: the increase in income inequality in the United States and the increase in ideological and partisan polarization, particularly in the U.S. House. These two national-level trends are commonly thought to be positively related. But, there are few tested theoretical connections between them, and it is potentially problematic to infer individual-level behavior from these aggregate-level trends. In fact, an examination of the literature reveals, at least, three different theoretical outcomes for district-level income inequality on voter and congressional ideological positions. I explore these district-level theoretical and empirical possibilities as well as test them over decades with three different measures of income inequality. I argue and demonstrate that higher district levels of income inequality are related to higher levels of ideological liberalism in the U.S. House. This stands in contrast to the national-level trends, but it tracks closely to traditional understandings of congressional behavior. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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MALEMPATI, SUMAN
Emory Law Journal . 2020, Vol. 70 Issue 2, p417-463. 47p.
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ELECTION law, CLAUSES (Law), CYBERTERRORISM, INTERNET security, and VOTING Rights Act of 1975 (U.S.)
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While foreign adversaries continue to launch cyberattacks aimed at disrupting elections in the United States, Congress has been reluctant to take action. After Russia interfered in the 2016 election, cybersecurity experts articulated clear measures that must be taken to secure U.S. election systems against foreign interference. Yet the federal government has failed to act. Congress's reticence is based on a misguided notion that greater federal involvement in the conduct of elections unconstitutionally infringes on states' rights. Both state election officials and certain congressional leaders operate under the assumption that federalism principles grant states primacy in conducting federal elections. This Comment dispels the myth that Congress must defer to states to regulate federal elections. The text of the Elections Clause in Article I, Section 4 of the U.S. Constitution confers to Congress final authority in determining the "Times, Places and Manner" of federal elections. Therefore, the system of administering federal elections is based on decentralization rather than federalism. The risk of foreign interference in U.S. elections was a precise reason the founders bestowed on Congress ultimate control over federal elections. States and municipalities lack the capacity to effectively combat foreign cyber invasion. This Comment makes the case that Congress has a responsibility to exercise its power under the Elections Clause to create a federal plan to secure voter registration databases and voting mechanisms against cyberattacks in order to protect the integrity of American democracy. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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Block, Geoffrey J. H.
Yale Law & Policy Review . Fall2020, Vol. 39 Issue 1, p249-291. 43p.
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ACTIONS & defenses (Law), INTELLIGENCE service, NATIONAL security, and UNITED States. National Security Act of 1947
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This Note explores how Congress can respond to a president who withholds non-covert intelligence operations from the congressional intelligence committees in violation of the National Security Act. This Note proposes a novel solution for Congress: the elevation of the Gang of Eight into a joint permanent select committee that is authorized to file suit on behalf of Congress. Congressional lawsuits are likely to be challenged on the basis of standing. Gang of Eight lawsuits could empower congressionalleaders to meet a court's standing analysis, allowing Congress to reassert its role in overseeing the intelligence community. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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17. Congress's Power over Military Offices. [2021]
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Price, Zachary S.
Texas Law Review . Feb2021, Vol. 99 Issue 3, p491-579. 89p.
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CONSTITUTIONAL law, PUBLIC administration, ARMED Forces, and UNITED States armed forces
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Although scholars have explored at length the constitutional law of office-holding with respect to civil and administrative offices, parallel questions regarding military office-holding have received insufficient attention. Even scholars who defend broad congressional authority to structure civil administration typically presume that the President, as Commander in Chief, holds greater authority over the military. For its part, the executive branch has claimed plenary authority over assignment of military duties and control of military officers. This pro-presidential consensus is mistaken. Although the President, as Commander in Chief, must have some form of directive authority over U.S. military forces in the field, the constitutional text and structure, read in light of longstanding historical practice, give Congress extensive power to structure the offices, chains of command, and disciplinary mechanisms through which the President's authority is exercised. In particular, much as in the administrative context. Congress may vest particular powers and duties--authority to launch nuclear weapons or a cyber operation, for example, or command over particular units--in particular statutorily created offices. In addition, although the Constitution affords presidents removal authority as a default means of command discipline. Congress may supplant and limit this authority by replacing it with alternative disciplinary mechanisms, such as criminal penalties for disobeying lawful orders. By defining duties, command relationships, and disciplinary mechanisms in this way. Congress may establish structures of executive branch accountability that promote key values, protect military professionalism, and even encourage or discourage particular results, all without infringing upon the President's ultimate authority to direct the nation's armed forces. These conclusions bear directly on recent legislative proposals to vest authority over cyber weapons, force withdrawals, or nuclear weapons in officers other than the President. They also enable a potent critique of the Supreme Court's recent insistence on a "unitary" executive branch in Seila Law LLC v. Consumer Financial Protection Bureau, and they shed new light on broader separation-of-powers debates over executive-branch structure, conventions of governmental behavior, the civil service's constitutionality, and Reconstruction's historical importance. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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Fagan, E. J. and McGee, Zachary A.
Legislative Studies Quarterly . Feb2022, Vol. 47 Issue 1, p53-77. 25p.
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PUBLIC officers, ACTIONS & defenses (Law), PROBLEM solving, and MENTAL representation
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This article examines the relationship between demand for expert information from members of the US Congress and increased issue salience in the public. As problems become salient, policymakers should seek out expert information to define problems and identify effective policy solutions to address those problems. Previous work on elite mass public representation and government problem solving has relied on public actions by elected officials to evaluate this relationship. We rely instead on new data on the policy content of privately requested reports from the Congressional Research Service (CRS) from 1997 to 2017. We find strong evidence that members consult experts when issues become salient, even when controlling for legislative agendas. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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Bishin, Benjamin G., Freebourn, Justin, and Teten, Paul
Political Research Quarterly . Dec2021, Vol. 74 Issue 4, p1009-1023. 15p.
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GAY rights, EQUALITY, POLARIZATION (Social sciences), DEMOCRATS' attitudes, REPUBLICANS, and LGBTQ+ people
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The U.S. Supreme Court's recent application of employment protections to gays and lesbians in Bostock v. Clayton County highlights the striking absence of policy produced by the U.S. Congress despite two decades of increased public support for gay rights. With the notable exceptions of allowing gays and lesbians to serve in the military, and passing hate crimes legislation, every other federal policy advancing gay rights over the last three decades has been the product of a Supreme Court ruling or Executive Order. To better understand the reasons for this inaction, we examine the changing preferences of members of Congress on LGBTQ (lesbian, gay, bisexual, transgender, and queer) issues. Examining scores from the Human Rights Campaign from 1989 to 2019, we find a striking polarization by the parties on LGBTQ issues, as Democrats have become much more supportive and Republicans even more opposed to gay rights. This change has been driven not by gerrymandering, mass opinion polarization, or elite backlash, but among Republicans by a mix of both conversion and replacement, and among Democrats primarily of replacement of more moderate members. The result is a striking lack of collective representation that leaves members of the LGBTQ community at risk to the whims of presidents and jurists. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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20. The Future Is Here NowPublic Integrity Editor-at-Large Series: "The State of the Republic". [2022]
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Klingner, Donald E.
Public Integrity . Jan/Feb 2022, Vol. 24 Issue 1, p105-109. 5p.
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CORRUPT practices in elections, POLITICAL leadership, VOTE buying, POLITICAL campaigns, and HUMAN beings
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The Republic faces three existential threats: domestic White nationalism, global tyranny, and global warming. Threat #1: Trump-Inspired White Nationalism In 2020, as his reelection campaign faltered due to the COVID-19 pandemic and a cratering economy, Trump responded by proactively undermining confidence in the election. MAGA Republicans think that if they retain the filibuster, block Senate approval of the Voting Rights Act, and retake the Senate in 2022, the U.S. will remain a White nationalist state rather than continuing to evolve as a multi-cultural democracy (https://www.theguardian.com/commentisfree/2021/jun/06/republican-party-donald-trump-american-democracy-elections). [Extracted from the article]
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Tucker, Patrick D. and Smith, Steven S.
Political Behavior . Dec2021, Vol. 43 Issue 4, p1639-1661. 23p. 4 Charts, 4 Graphs.
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PRESIDENTIAL candidates, PANEL analysis, ELECTIONS, POLITICAL knowledge, POLITICAL campaigns, and SEASONS
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How do citizens' preferences for candidates change during a campaign season? For the first time, this panel study examines how citizens' preferences for candidates change during the general election campaign season for House, Senate, and presidential elections, which vary widely in their salience and contestedness. House races exhibit the greatest mean change in candidate evaluations and presidential races exhibit the least. At the individual level, there is considerable variation across the three types of contest in the presence of a candidate preference and in change over the campaign season. We investigate differences across the three types of races in initial familiarity with candidates and estimate transition models to evaluate the effect of race contestedness, partisanship, presidential approval, political sophistication and knowledge on change in candidate preferences in each type of race. Change in knowledge of the candidates during the campaign season has the greatest effect in House contests, where initial familiarity with the candidates is the most limited. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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Scoville, Delia
Ecology Law Quarterly . 2020, Vol. 47 Issue 2, p743-750. 8p.
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TAX credits, CORPORATE taxes, UNITED States tax laws, and TAX Cuts & Jobs Act (U.S.)
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The article discusses two major legislative acts passed by Congress to change tax law in the U.S., including the 2017 Tax Cuts and Jobs Act (TCJA) and the 2018 Bipartisan Budget Act (BBA). Topics covered include BBA's elimination of the production tax credit and the investment tax credit, and TCJA's creation of the base erosion anti-abuse tax (BEAT) and its elimination of the corporate alternative minimum tax.
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BROWN, ELIZABETH L.
Duke Law Journal . Feb2022, Vol. 71 Issue 5, p1105-1138. 34p.
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SPENDING power (Constitutional law), STATE laws, and STATE power
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Congress's spending power allows the federal government to spend money to provide for the general welfare of the United States. While this "general welfare" language was initially understood as barring Congress from apportioning money for local purposes, the Supreme Court's interpretation of the spending power has treated this limitation as effectively nonjusticiable. Consequently, the spending power has provided Congress with an attractive carrot to coax states into enacting regulations that Congress could not achieve through its other powers. This Note challenges the notion that the general welfare limitation of the Spending Clause should be considered nonjusticiable. Instead, it calls for a return to the original understanding that the spending power could not be exercised to promote purely local purposes, an understanding that the Court adopted in its earlier spending cases. Relying on principles of collective action federalism and the "substantial effects" test from United States v. Lopez, this Note proposes distinguishing between general and local spending by looking at the anticipated effects of the spending beyond the recipient of the funds itself. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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Jacobs, Nicholas F. and Milkis, Sidney M.
Forum (2194-6183) . Feb2022, Vol. 19 Issue 4, p709-744. 36p.
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PARTISANSHIP, CAMPAIGN funds, POLITICAL campaigns, CAMPAIGN promises, PRESIDENTIAL candidates, and INAUGURATION
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On the campaign trail and at his inauguration, Joe Biden pledged, above all else, to be a uniter to restore the soul of America. At the end of his first year in office, many campaign promises have been met, but unity has not been one. Far from transcending partisanship as promised, Biden has embraced the levers of presidential discretion and power inherent within the modern executive office to advance partisan objectives. He is not just a victim of polarization, but actively contributes to it. This is not unexpected. Rather it is the culmination of a decades-long reorientation within both major parties: the rise of an executive-centered party-system, with Democrats and Republicans alike relying on presidents and presidential candidates to pronounce party doctrine, raise campaign funds, campaign on behalf of their partisan brethren, mobilize grass roots support, and advance party programs. Like Barack Obama and Donald Trump before him, Biden has aggressively used executive power to cut the Gordian knot of partisan gridlock in Congress. Even pandemic politics is not immune to presidential partisanship; in fact, it has accentuated the United States' presidency-centered democracy, which weakens the public resolve to confront and solve national problems. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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Petrina, Stephen
Journal of Military History . Jul2019, Vol. 83 Issue 3, p795-829. 35p. 3 Black and White Photographs, 1 Chart, 1 Graph.
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MILITARY intelligence, RESEARCH & development, HISTORY, WAR reparations, and UNITED States. Air Force
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This article explains how exploitation of research and development (R&D) configured into the post–World War II policies of the U.S. Army Air Forces (AAF) and U.S. Air Force (USAF). The narrative follows the coordination of operations LUSTY, OVERCAST, and PAPERCLIP and the Scientific Advisory Group (SAG) in the AAF’s exploitation of intelligence and reparations for postwar policies and politics. The history of the SAG’s efforts from 1944 to 1947 reveals the intensity with which the AAF and its consultants in the aeronautical sciences pursued Nazi R&D. The article helps explain the place of intelligence and reparations in AAF and USAF policies for postwar R&D. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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Zhao, Ting, Fan, Shanghua, and Sun, Liu
BMC Genomic Data . 11/17/2021, Vol. 22 Issue 1, p1-8. 8p.
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GENETIC carriers, GENETIC variation, MEDICAL genetics, THROMBOTIC microangiopathies, and MEDICAL genomics
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Background: Upshaw–Schulman syndrome (USS) is an autosomal recessive disease characterized by thrombotic microangiopathies caused by pathogenic variants in ADAMTS13. We aimed to (1) curate the ADAMTS13 gene pathogenic variant dataset and (2) estimate the carrier frequency and genetic prevalence of USS using Genome Aggregation Database (gnomAD) data. Methods: Studies were comprehensively retrieved. All previously reported pathogenic ADAMTS13 variants were compiled and annotated with gnomAD allele frequencies. The pooled global and population-specific carrier frequencies and genetic prevalence of USS were calculated using the Hardy-Weinberg equation. Results: We mined reported disease-causing variants that were present in the gnomAD v2.1.1, filtered by allele frequency. The pathogenicity of variants was classified according to the American College of Medical Genetics and Genomics criteria. The genetic prevalence and carrier frequency of USS were 0.43 per 1 million (95% CI: [0.36, 0.55]) and 1.31 per 1 thousand population, respectively. When the novel pathogenic/likely pathogenic variants were included, the genetic prevalence and carrier frequency were 1.1 per 1 million (95% CI: [0.89, 1.37]) and 2.1 per 1 thousand population, respectively. Conclusions: The genetic prevalence and carrier frequency of USS were within the ranges of previous estimates. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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27. Ideology and Gender in U.S. House Elections. [2020]
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Thomsen, Danielle M.
Political Behavior . Jun2020, Vol. 42 Issue 2, p415-442. 28p. 10 Charts, 6 Graphs.
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ELECTIONS, PRIMARIES, IDEOLOGY, SEX discrimination, GENDER, HOUSING, and UNITED States Congressional elections
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Studies of gender-ideology stereotypes suggest that voters evaluate male and female candidates in different ways, yet data limitations have hindered an analysis of candidate ideology, sex, and actual election outcomes. This article draws on a new dataset of male and female primary and general election candidates for the U.S. House of Representatives from 1980 to 2012. I find little evidence that the relationship between ideology and victory patterns differs for male and female candidates. Neither Republican nor Democratic women experience distinct electoral fates than ideologically similar men. Candidate sex and ideology do interact in other ways, however; Democratic women are more liberal than their male counterparts, and they are advantaged in primaries over Republican women as well as Democratic men. The findings have important implications for contemporary patterns of women's representation, and they extend our understanding of gender bias and neutrality in American elections. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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Tamas, Bernard, Johnston, Ron, and Pattie, Charles
Social Science Quarterly (Wiley-Blackwell) . Jan2022, Vol. 103 Issue 1, p181-192. 12p. 5 Graphs.
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VOTER turnout, PARTISANSHIP, ELECTIONS, and GERRYMANDERING
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Objective: Partisan bias occurs when votes are distributed across districts in such a way that even if the vote between two parties were equal, one party would win more seats than the other. Gerrymandering is a well‐established cause of partisan bias, but it is not the only one. In this article, we ask whether the decline of voter turnout can also influence partisan bias. Methods: We modified the Gelman–King partisan symmetry measure to make it sensitive to turnout differences across U.S. House elections from 1972 to 2018. Results: We found that turnout variation has caused partisan bias in U.S. House elections in the Democratic Party's favor since at least 1972, though turnout bias has gotten weaker in recent elections. Conclusion: While turnout bias can buffer the impact of turnout reductions, it has the potential to dramatically increase the number of seats a party loses when its supporters fail to vote. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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Cormack, Lindsey
Journal of Gender Studies . Dec2016, Vol. 25 Issue 6, p626-640. 15p. 5 Charts, 1 Graph.
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AMERICAN women in politics, COMMUNICATION styles, POLITICAL communication, REPRESENTATIVE government, and GENDER stereotypes
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Legislators approach each election as if they might lose. Electoral insecurity coupled with gender stereotypes held by voters and lawmakers alike may lead female legislators to communicate more voting decisions to voters as a signal of their policy-driven efforts. Using an original data-set of over 40,000 official e-newsletters and Real Simple Syndication feeds sent by members of Congress, I show that women reveal more roll call votes to constituents than their male counterparts. Significant differences exist between male and female incumbents in the frequency of vote revelation despite the fact that male and female legislators use these communication techniques to reach constituents at the same rates and call attention to similar bills. These differences persist after accounting for the effects of party, seniority, district fit, and other potential confounds. Women highlight their ability to fulfill the roles expected of lawmakers by explicitly signaling involvement in lawmaking activities more frequently than men. In a second test, I analyze the types of bills legislators reveal votes on and find no differences between men and women. [ABSTRACT FROM PUBLISHER]
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Praino, Rodrigo and Graycar, Adam
Public Integrity . Sep/Oct2018, Vol. 20 Issue 5, p478-496. 19p. 3 Charts, 4 Graphs.
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CORRUPTION laws, POLITICAL corruption, POLITICAL corruption -- Law & legislation, and UNITED States politics & government
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Ninety three of the 1,818 people who served in the U.S. House of Representatives between 1972 and 2012 were investigated for corruption by the Ethics Committee. Eighteen were acquitted and 75 suffered consequences (reprimand/payback/resignation/conviction). Detailed analysis of the data shows that the longer one is in Congress, the more likely is the chance of corruption. In addition, the more powerful one is in Congress, the more likely is the chance of corruption. This article concludes that corruption follows opportunity. In general, the more opportunity members of Congress have to engage in corruption, the more they will ultimately succumb to corruption. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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SCOURFIELD MCLAUCHLAN, JUDITHANNE and GAY, THOMAS
Texas Review of Law & Politics . Fall2015, Vol. 20 Issue 1, p79-106. 28p.
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AMICI curiae, LEGISLATIVE bills, and PARTIES to actions
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The article focuses on the viability of the U.S. Congress in filing amicus curiae briefs during the Rehnquist Court that was conducted before the U.S. Supreme Court. Topics discussed include the connections between the U.S. Congress and the Supreme has been associated with former interpreting or rejecting bills and the reaction of the latter to those decisions, and the congressional influence towards the Supreme Court during the Rehnquist Court through amicus curiae briefs.
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American Journal of Political Science (John Wiley & Sons, Inc.) . Jan2022, Vol. 66 Issue 1, p238-254. 17p.
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BUREAUCRACY, POLICY sciences, SEPARATION of powers, GOVERNMENT policy, GOVERNMENT agencies, and POLARIZATION (Social sciences)
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Increasing ideological polarization and dysfunction in Congress raise questions about whether and how Congress remains capable of constraining the activities of other actors in the separation of powers system. In this article, I argue Congress uses nonstatutory policymaking tools to overcome the burdens of legislative gridlock in an increasingly polarized time to constrain executive branch actors. I leverage a new data set of committee reports issued by the House and Senate appropriations committees from fiscal years 1923 through 2019 to empirically explore these dynamics and evaluate my argument. Traditionally, these reports are a primary vehicle through which Congress directs agency policymaking in the appropriations process. Committees increasingly turn to them when passing legislation is most difficult and interbranch agency problems are most pronounced. In this way, nonstatutory mechanisms may help maintain the balance of power across branches, even when Congress faces gridlock‐induced incapacity. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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Plier, Austin
William & Mary Law Review . 2020, Vol. 61 Issue 6, p1719-1758. 40p.
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RACIAL minorities, LEGAL status of voters, and UNITED States Congressional elections
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The author comments on the single-member district mandate for U.S. House of Representatives elections that was enacted by the Congress in 1967. Topics covered include the Congress' intentions for enacting the law including the representation of racial minority communities in the House, the law's unintended consequences on the political process, and the implications for the First Amendment political association rights of voters.
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KASLOVSKY, JACLYN
American Political Science Review . May2022, Vol. 116 Issue 2, p645-661. 17p.
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UNITED States senators, CONSTITUENTS (Persons), POLICY sciences, DOMESTIC travel, REPRESENTATIVE government, ELECTION districts, and ATTENTION
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Is local attention a substitute for policy representation? Fenno (1978) famously described how legislators develop personal ties with their constituents through periodic visits to their districts and carefully crafted communications. Existing work suggests that such interactions insulate incumbents electorally, creating less need to represent constituents' policy preferences. Surprisingly, this important argument has never been tested systematically. In this paper, I use data on senator travel and staffing behavior along with survey data from the 2011–2018 Cooperative Congressional Election Study to investigate this claim. In addition to showing that areas with important campaign donors are significantly more likely to receive resources, I find that local visits may decrease approval among ideologically opposed constituents. Furthermore, I find inconsistent evidence regarding the effectiveness of local staff. These results suggest that local attention does not always cultivate goodwill in the district. Under polarized politics, home style does not effectively substitute for policy representation. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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Ballard, Andrew O.
Journal of Politics . Jan2022, Vol. 84 Issue 1, p335-350. 16p.
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AGENDA setting theory (Communication) and LEGISLATIVE voting
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The study of agenda power has largely been the study of negative agenda power. But standard measures of negative agenda power are insufficient to measure the majority's agenda choices: they only consider a small proportion of bills, only detail how often negative agenda power fails (rather than succeeds), and cannot help us understand positive agenda power. To understand the incentives and strategies of agenda decision-making, then, we must know about members' preferences on all bills. I develop an approach to estimate members' preferences on all bills, by generating quantitative characterizations of the policy content in each bill. I use the resulting estimates to examine both positive and negative agenda power using all bills and to directly compare levels of agenda power between chambers of the US Congress. While I find similarly strong negative agenda control in both chambers, I find substantially stronger positive agenda control in the House than the Senate. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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George, Kelsey, Grant, Erin, Kellett, Cate, and Pettitt, Karl
Library Resources & Technical Services . Jul2021, Vol. 65 Issue 3, p84-95. 12p.
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UNDOCUMENTED immigrants, COMMITTEES, SUBJECT headings, LIBRARIANS, and UNITED States. Congress
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In 2014, the Library of Congress (LC) rejected a proposal to change headings in the Library of Congress Subject Headings (LCSH) that refer to undocumented immigrants as "Illegal aliens." Two years later, a Subject Analysis Committee (SAC) working group submitted recommendations regarding how and why LC should change the LCSH "Illegal aliens."1 That same year, LC decided to cancel the "Illegal aliens" subject heading, which Congress subsequently sought to block.2 Congress eventually required LC "to make publicly available its process for changing or adding subject headings . . . [and use] a process to change or add subject headings that are clearly defined, transparent, and allows input from stakeholders including those in the congressional community."3 In response, LC paused their plan to change "Illegal aliens." In June 2019, a new SAC Working Group on Alternatives to LCSH "Illegal aliens" was convened to survey local institutions implementing changes to the subject heading and to chart a path for librarians to address the subject heading at the organizational level. At the 2020 ALA Annual Conference, the working group presented their report. This paper builds upon that report and details next steps both for the working group and library professionals who plan to implement changes at their own organizations. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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37. Middle East Policy in Transition: Issues for the 117th Congress & the New Administration. [2021]
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Feltman, Jeffrey, Mortazavi, Negar, Freeman, Chas W., and Moran, James P.
Middle East Policy . Mar2021, Vol. 28 Issue 1, p3-22. 20p.
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INTERNATIONAL relations -- Congresses, CONFERENCES & conventions, MIDDLE East-United States relations, and FOREIGN relations of the United States -- 21st century
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The following is an edited transcript of the 103rd in a series of Capitol Hill conferences convened by the Middle East Policy Council. The event took place on January 29, 2021, via Zoom, with Council Vice‐Chair Gina Abercrombie‐Winstanley moderating, Council President Richard J. Schmierer contributing, and Council Executive Director Bassima Alghussein serving as discussant. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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Afrimadona
Contemporary Politics . Sep2021, Vol. 27 Issue 4, p419-438. 20p. 1 Diagram, 1 Chart, 1 Graph.
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ECONOMIC sanctions, PRESIDENTS, and INTERNATIONAL relations
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This article explores whether party polarisation in the American Congress affects the length of legislated sanctions. While Congress can enact sanctions, it usually authorises the president to waive, suspend or terminate them. However, Congress can prevent the president from ending a sanction if both parties can cooperate to block the presidential proposal or pass a sanction bill challenging the presidential preference. Borrowing from moderate polarisation argument that both parties can cooperate only when they are moderately polarised, I argue that the probability of sanction termination declines if Congress is moderately polarised but increases when Congress is either least or extremely polarised. This is because only under moderately polarised Congress can both parties cooperate to stop the sanction termination. I test this argument using TIES data (1945–2005) and find support for this expectation. This research contributes to our knowledge on the role of congressional dynamics in shaping American foreign policy. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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Tokeshi, Matthew
Political Behavior . Mar2020, Vol. 42 Issue 1, p285-304. 20p. 3 Charts.
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GUBERNATORIAL elections, AFRICAN Americans, WORKING class white people, STATISTICAL matching, VOTING, VOTERS, GOVERNORS, and SET design
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Despite making notable gains at the local level, very few African Americans have been elected to the high-profile statewide offices of governor or U.S. senator. Previous research offers little systematic evidence on the role of racial prejudice in the campaigns of African Americans trying to reach these offices for the first time. In this paper, I introduce a new data set designed to test whether African American candidates for these offices are penalized due to their race. Comparing all 24 African American challengers (non-incumbents) from 2000 to 2014 to white challengers from the same party running in the same state for the same office around the same time, I find that white challengers are about three times more likely to win and receive about 13 percentage points more support among white voters. These estimates hold when controlling for a number of potential confounding factors and when employing several statistical matching estimators. The results conflict with earlier studies that focus on a single gubernatorial contest or elections at the U.S. House level. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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40. TAKING APPROPRIATIONS SERIOUSLY. [2021]
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Metzger, Gillian E.
Columbia Law Review . May2021, Vol. 121 Issue 4, p1075-1172. 98p.
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ADMINISTRATIVE law, PUBLIC spending -- Law & legislation, and PRESIDENTS of the United States
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Appropriations lie at the core of the administrative state and are becoming increasingly important as deep partisan divides have stymied substantive legislation. Both Congress and the President exploit appropriations to control government and advance their policy agendas, with the border wall battle being just one of several recent high-profile examples. Yet in public law doctrine, appropriations are ignored, pulled out for special legal treatment, or subjected to legal frameworks ill-suited for appropriations realities. This Article documents how appropriations are marginalized in a variety of public law contexts and assesses the reasons for this unjustified treatment. Appropriations' doctrinal marginalization does not affect the political branches equally, but instead enhances executive branch and presidential power over appropriations at the expense of Congress. Yet legal doctrines governing appropriations should have the opposite effect because constitutional text, structure, and history make clear the central importance of Congress's appropriations power. Appropriations' doctrinal marginalization undermines the separation of powers even further by undercutting political accountability through Congress and creating de facto presidential spending authority, with the executive branch able to violate governing statutes on appropriations with minimal legal consequences. This Article then turns to the question of what taking appropriations seriously might mean for public law doctrine. It concludes that appropriations exceptionalism is not problematic if it reflects the realities of the appropriations process and does not downplay appropriations' significance. Doctrines should attend to the separation of powers dynamics raised by appropriations and reinforce Congress's power of the purse. Among other consequences, this leads to jurisdictional doctrines that put primacy on congressional enforcement of appropriations limits in court. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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Almutairi, Bandar Alhumaidi A.
Functions of Language . 2022, Vol. 29 Issue 2, p169-198. 30p.
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TIME series analysis, POLARIZATION (Social sciences), TREND analysis, CORPORA, and PROBABILITY theory
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This study investigates least delicate patterns of appraisal in two diachronic corpora of UK Parliament and U.S. Congress speeches over the last two centuries, focusing on diachronic changes and trends of systemic probabilities of least delicate engagement and attitude polarity. Based on computational algorithms that automatically extract appraisal instances and intersections from the two corpora, the comparative analysis carried out in this paper incorporates several statistical methods, including homogeneity or 'change-point' tests, Mann-Kendall trend analysis, and time-series Correspondence Analysis. The results indicate that, in both corpora, probabilities of monoglossic as well as attitudinal patterns (as opposed to neutral ones) follow statistically significant upward trends. In addition, positive polarity is increasing steadily, especially in the U.S. Congress. appraisal intersections are also dynamically changing depending on changes in sociopolitical circumstances. More specifically, in the formative and early years during which party conflicts were intensified, heteroglossic patterns are favored. In war and post-war periods, monoglossic patterns are more associated with neutral polarity. In recent decades, during which political polarization hit a peak, monoglossic patterns begin to favor attitudinal polarity. These findings are discussed in terms of possible causal and correlational interpretations, limitations and directions for future research. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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Ferguson, Thomas, Jorgensen, Paul, and Chen, Jie
Structural Change & Economic Dynamics . Jun2022, Vol. 61, p527-545. 19p.
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CAMPAIGN funds, ELECTIONS, POPULAR vote, VOTING, LATENT variables, and FINANCE
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• The paper rests on a new and more comprehensive dataset built from government sources. • It uses the data to show that the relations between money and popular votes for major parties in all elections from 1980 to 2018 for the U.S. Senate and House of Representatives are well approximated by straight lines. • It considers potential challenges to this "linear model" of money and elections on statistical grounds, notably those arising from possible reciprocal causation between money and votes ("endogeneity"). • The paper builds a spatial latent instrumental variable model to tackle this much discussed problem and checks its results by studying relations between changes in gambling odds and contributions in key elections. Both approaches suggest that reciprocal causation may happen to some degree, but that money's independent influence on elections remains powerful. This paper analyzes whether money influences election outcomes. Using a new and more comprehensive dataset built from government sources, the paper shows that the relations between money and votes cast for major parties in elections for the U.S. Senate and House of Representatives from 1980 to 2018 are well approximated by straight lines. It then considers possible challenges to this "linear model" of money and elections on statistical grounds, resting on possible endogeneity arising from reciprocal causation between, for example, popularity and votes. The paper develops a spatial Bayesian latent instrumental variable model to tackle this much discussed problem. It checks its results by studying relations between changes in gambling odds and contributions in key elections. Both approaches suggest that reciprocal causation may happen to some degree, but that money's independent influence on elections remains powerful. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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Guber, Deborah Lynn, Bohr, Jeremiah, and Dunlap, Riley E.
Environmental Politics . Jun2021, Vol. 30 Issue 4, p538-558. 21p. 1 Diagram, 1 Chart, 5 Graphs.
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CLIMATE change & politics, CLIMATE change skepticism, POLARIZATION (Social sciences), PARTISANSHIP, ENVIRONMENTAL policy, UNITED States climate change policy, and UNITED States politics & government
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Scholars who study the failure of climate change policy in the United States tend to focus on the mechanics of denial and the coordinated efforts of political operatives, conservative think tanks, and partisan news outlets to cast doubt on what has become overwhelming scientific consensus. In contrast, we address a factor that has been understudied until now – the role of climate change advocacy in the U.S. Congress. Using quantitative text analysis on a corpus of floor speeches published in the Congressional Record between 1996 and 2015, we find notable differences in the language partisans use. Democrats communicate in ways that are message-based, emphasizing the weight of scientific evidence, while Republicans tend towards a softer, cue-based narrative based on anecdotes and storytelling. We end with a discussion of what climate change advocates can hope to accomplish through the 'politics of talk,' especially in an age of heightened polarization. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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Gray, Thomas R. and Jenkins, Jeffery A.
Social Science Quarterly (Wiley-Blackwell) . Aug2019, Vol. 100 Issue 5, p1664-1684. 21p. 1 Diagram, 5 Charts, 5 Graphs, 1 Map.
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DAYLIGHT saving, VOTING, HISTORY, REPUBLICANS -- Political activity, ENERGY consumption, AMERICAN law -- History, UNITED States. Congress, and 20TH century
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Objective: Daylight Saving Time (DST) is a government policy regulating the timing of daylight during the summer months. While DST's existence is taken for granted in modern American life, the adoption and expansion of the policy was heavily debated, with strong opposition that persists to the present day—a full century after its inception as a World War I energy‐efficiency program. After reviewing the history of DST, we analyze the political economy of congressional vote choice on DST policy. Method: We analyze votes of members of Congress on all DST‐specific roll calls between 1918 and 1985, assessing whether members voted to expand or reduce DST. Results: We find that ideology, party, geographic location, and the portion of a constituency made up by farmers all strongly predict member support for adopting and expanding DST—and that each of these effects is durable over time. Digging deeper, we find significant evidence for local representation on DST votes, as constituency‐specific factors are more strongly associated with congressional vote choice than partisanship or general ideological preferences. Conclusion: Overall, our results provide an original empirical assessment of the factors that drove the adoption and revision of a contentious and significant government policy that endures today. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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45. Interpreting by the Rules. [2021]
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Kysar, Rebecca M.
Texas Law Review . May2021, Vol. 99 Issue 6, p1115-1172. 58p.
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STATUTORY interpretation, RULE of law, SEPARATION of powers, and LEGISLATIVE power
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A promising new school of statutory interpretation has emerged that tries to wed the work of Congress with that of the courts by tying interpretation to congressional process. The primary challenge to this process-based interpretive approach is the difficulty in reconstructing the legislative process. Scholars have proposed leveraging Congress's procedural frameworks and rules as reliable heuristics to that end. This Article starts from that premise but will add wrinkles to it. The complications stem from the fact that each rule is adopted for distinct reasons and is applied differently across contexts. As investigation into these particularities proceeds, it becomes apparent that the complications are also rooted in something deeper--that Congress's procedures are often hollow, even fraudulent. Congress, it turns out, breaks its own rules with impunity. Which brings us to a deeper riddle: What is the significance of the rules to an interpreter when Congress routinely flouts them? If one's goal is to accurately depict the lawmaking process in hopes of deriving rules of construction that have democratic roots, then surely the interpreter must discard the rules as hopelessly unreliable guideposts. Then again, if the interpreter's ultimate aim is to serve democratic ends, then shouldn't we strive toward rule of law values, ensuring that Congress acts in an honorable way? Ultimately, I resolve the question by first asking what the rules are meant to do. Only then can we understand what it means to interpret by them. Through examination of many procedural contexts, I set forth an innocuous account of congressional defiance of the rules. Rather than a symptom of branch dysfunction, we should see the rules as guidelines that attempt to order congressional business but that ultimately must give way to politics. Nonetheless, some rules can help the interpreter paint a more faithful picture of congressional procedure in spite of their not being followed. More broadly, I conclude that interpretive presumptions deriving from the general efficacy of legislative rules, rather than their precise enforcement, are more successful in mirroring congressional reality. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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Taylor, Andrew J.
Social Science Quarterly (Wiley-Blackwell) . Jun2019, Vol. 100 Issue 4, p1297-1307. 11p. 3 Charts.
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COMMITTEES, SCHOLARS, REGRESSION analysis, LEGISLATION, UNITED States. Congress, and SENIORITY system
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Objective: Despite the formal seniority system's demise, long‐serving members of the U.S. House of Representatives continue to demonstrate disproportionate legislative effectiveness in what scholars universally consider a strong‐party era. I test a bonding model of the continued utility of legislative seniority in an effort to understand the causal mechanism. Methods: I use regression and multilevel mixed effects analyses of roll‐call and co‐sponsorship data in the U.S. House from the 1990s and early 2000s to test hypotheses derived from the model. Results: The results are consistent with a process in which senior members attract support for their legislation through relationships cultivated over time. Seniority does not act like a commodity. Conclusion: Seniority continues to provide value to its holders in the House by providing them opportunities to strengthen bonds with colleagues used to build coalitions for their legislative proposals. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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Critchfield, Thomas, Reed, Derek, and Jarmolowicz, David
Psychological Record . Mar2015, Vol. 65 Issue 1, p161-176. 16p.
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LAW -- Sources, FORENSIC psychology, HUMAN behavior, RESEARCH, and UNITED States politics & government
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The number of new laws produced by the United States Congress has declined in recent years, with the 2013 Congress yielding the fewest new laws ever. A formerly reliable pattern, in which law production was concentrated near the end of an annual session, appears to be vanishing. Drawing upon archival data sources and political commentary, we examine some possible shifts in reinforcement contingencies that may contribute to these changes. Our analysis suggests that the two types of changes in law production began at different points in time and may have different origins. We conclude with comments on the value of conducting empirically informed behavioral analyses of complex, everyday phenomena for which no experiments are possible. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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Russell, Annelise
Journal of Information Technology & Politics . Apr-Jun2022, Vol. 19 Issue 2, p180-196. 17p. 4 Color Photographs, 7 Charts, 6 Graphs.
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UNITED States senators, SOCIAL media, REPUTATION, COLLECTIVE representation, and LOCAL government
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Twitter is changing strategic messaging in the U.S. Senate. Senators are using Twitter to frame their political brand for constituents, fostering a new digital dialog with constituents. I propose a constituent-driven theory of strategic messaging where senators curate a reputation on Twitter that matches their perceived expectations of their primary constituency. Representation on social media challenges what we know about senators' institutionally and politically constrained behavior by analyzing them in a new media climate where individual discretion is high and the costs are low. Using a unique dataset of more than 180,000 hand-coded tweets by senators, I show that senators develop two types of digital constituent relationships – an issue-oriented, national reputation versus traditional outreach to geographic constituents. Senators with issue-based constituencies prioritize policy, conveying an issue-driven style of representation; however, senators with tepid electoral futures pair their policy rhetoric with state-based issues or local concerns. These findings expand the scope of existing theories on congressional communication and link the technological shifts in Congress to information senators use to build relationships with voters. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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Jäckle, Sebastian, Metz, Thomas, Wenzelburger, Georg, and König, Pascal D.
American Politics Research . Jul2020, Vol. 48 Issue 4, p427-441. 15p.
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ELECTION of legislators, ELECTION districts, POLITICAL candidates -- Attitudes, PERSONALITY, VOTERS -- Attitudes, and UNITED States. Congress. House
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This article addresses the question of appearance-based effects by looking at the U.S. House of Representatives election 2016. We broaden the focus beyond existing studies by offering a comprehensive and systematic analysis of the three traits attractiveness, competence, and likability while simultaneously taking into account confounding third variables and possible interactions. Corresponding to the comparative character of electoral competition in the districts, we developed a relative measure of the three traits which we apply in an online survey. This measure also takes into account the raters' latency times, that is, their clicking speed, as a weighting factor for their ambiguity in the ratings. With these data we test whether appearance matters for the electoral outcome. We find that attractiveness positively affects the vote share, whereas perceived likability and competence play no role. The study also tests to what extent the found appearance effects are conditioned by incumbency status, age, and gender of the contestants. Furthermore, it gives hints which aspects of their appearance candidates could change to perform better at the ballot box. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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Atkinson, Mary Layton and Windett, Jason Harold
Political Behavior . Sep2019, Vol. 41 Issue 3, p769-789. 21p. 5 Charts, 7 Graphs.
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WOMEN legislators, WOMEN scholars, EMPLOYMENT portfolios, GENDER stereotypes, and INTERNATIONAL relations
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Scholars find that women who run for Congress are just as likely to win as men are, yet women face considerable challenges related to their sex on the campaign trail. Women are more likely to face challengers than men are, the challengers they face are typically more qualified, and gender stereotypes paint women as less able to handle important issues like defense and foreign affairs. We examine how women succeed in the face of these obstacle, arguing that women are successful, in part, because they craft large, diverse legislative agendas that include bills on a mix of topics. These topics include district interests, women's interests, and the masculine issues on which women are disadvantaged. We believe this balancing strategy allows women to develop reputations for competence on a wide range of issues, which in turn, helps them deter electoral challengers. We test our hypotheses by analyzing a comprehensive database of all bills introduced in the U.S. House between 1963 and 2009. We find that female MCs propose more bills, spread across more issues, than do men. Further, the topics of the bills women sponsor span a range of women's issues, masculine issues, and gender-neutral topics—giving support to the idea that women balance their legislative portfolios. Finally, we examine the electoral benefits to women of this strategy by analyzing rates of challenger emergence in Congressional races. We find that women must introduce twice as much legislation as men to see the probability of challenger emergence decrease to a level that is indistinguishable from that of men. The added effort and staff hours female MCs typically devote to crafting legislation, vis-à-vis male MCs, only serves to put them on equal footing with men. It does not give them an advantage. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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51. Fixing Congress. [2019]
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Marcosson, Samuel A.
BYU Journal of Public Law . 2019, Vol. 33 Issue 2, p227-286. 60p.
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PARTISANSHIP, POLITICAL parties, DEMOCRACY, and UNITED States politics & government
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The article discusses the extent to which the U.S. House of Representatives is beset by polarization and reduced to partisan gridlock, deeply compromising the effectiveness of democratic decision-making. Topics discussed include Senate's own rules that slow consideration of legislation to a standstill; solutions to congressional dysfunction; and ways in which congressional breakdown causes a crisis for democracy.
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Barreto Velázquez, Norberto
Historia Critica . Jan2018, Issue 67, p89-109. 21p. 1 Chart.
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COUP d'etat, Peru, 1968, MILITARY government, FISHING boats, TERRITORIAL waters, TWENTIETH century, HISTORY, INTERNATIONAL relations, and FOREIGN relations of the United States
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The expropriation of U.S. companies --such as the International Petroleum Company-- has been signaled in historiography as a decisive factor in determining the stance of the U.S. government towards Peru's military regime. This study shows that Congressional motivations were rather of a political nature, associated with the seizure of U.S. fishing vessels within the 200 nautical miles of territorial waters claimed by Peru. Moreover, the policies implemented by Peru's military government were used by a group of congressmen to advance their own agendas, criticizing U.S. foreign policy at a moment of conflict of powers between the Executive and the Congress. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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Mol, Maartje B. A., Strous, Maud T. A., van Osch, Frits H. M., Vogelaar, F. Jeroen, Barten, Dennis G., Farchi, Moshe, Foudraine, Norbert A., and Gidron, Yori
PLoS ONE . 10/28/2021, Vol. 16 Issue 10, p1-12. 12p.
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COVID-19, ARRHYTHMIA, PROGNOSIS, SYMPTOMS, VAGUS nerve, SINOATRIAL node, and HEART beat
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Background: Patients with COVID-19 present with a variety of clinical manifestations, ranging from mild or asymptomatic disease to severe illness and death. Whilst previous studies have clarified these and several other aspects of COVID-19, one of the ongoing challenges regarding COVID-19 is to determine which patients are at risk of adverse outcomes of COVID-19 infection. It is hypothesized that this is the result of insufficient inhibition of the immune response, with the vagus nerve being an important neuro-immuno-modulator of inflammation. Vagus nerve activity can be non-invasively indexed by heart-rate-variability (HRV). Therefore, we aimed to assess the prognostic value of HRV, as a surrogate marker for vagus nerve activity, in predicting mortality and intensive care unit (ICU) referral, in patients hospitalized with COVID-19. Methods: A retrospective cohort study including all consecutive patients (n = 271) diagnosed and hospitalized with COVID-19 between March 2020 and May 2020, without a history of cardiac arrhythmias (including atrial and ventricular premature contractions), pacemaker, or current bradycardia (heart rate <50 bpm) or tachycardia (heart rate >110 bpm). HRV was based on one 10s ECG recorded at admission. 3-week survival and ICU referral were examined. Results: HRV indexed as standard deviation of normal to normal heartbeat intervals (SDNN) predicted survival (H.R. = 0.53 95%CI: 0.31–0.92). This protective role was observed only in patients aged 70 years and older, not in younger patients. HRV below median value also predicted ICU referral within the first week of hospitalization (H.R = 0.51, 95%CI: 0.29–0.90, P = 0.021). Conclusion: Higher HRV predicts greater chances of survival, especially in patients aged 70 years and older with COVID-19, independent of major prognostic factors. Low HRV predicts ICU indication and admission in the first week after hospitalization. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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Wang, Qizhou, Ye, Haiwang, Li, Ning, Chi, Xiuwen, Xie, Wenbing, Chen, Dongfang, Jing, Shengguo, and Lei, Tao
Geofluids . 10/5/2021, p1-12. 12p. 1 Color Photograph, 7 Diagrams, 5 Graphs, 1 Map.
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STRAINS & stresses (Mechanics), STRESS concentration, DYNAMIC loads, CABLES, REACTION forces, and COAL mining
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This paper presents a comprehensive study of the support effect and characteristics of a collaborative reinforce system of U-steel support and anchored cable (USS-AC) for roadway under high dynamic stress in a coal mine in China. The deformational behavior of the roadway and the load characteristics of reinforcing elements were measured in real time and analyzed. A numerical simulation study has also been conducted to identify the interaction of the reinforcing elements to the surrounding rock under dynamic load. The research results suggest that the stress distribution of roadway surrounding rock could be changed and that residual strength of the surrounding rock near opening could be increased by using USS-AC. Based on the action of anchored cable, the moment distribution of U-steel support is optimized. The load capacity and nondeformability of the U-steel support are promoted. And the global stability of U-steel support is enhanced so as to achieve the goal of high supporting resistance. When the deformation stress of the surrounding rock is higher, the U-steel support deforms as the surrounding rock. The two side beams and the overlapping parts of U-steel support suffer the highest deformation stress. As a result, the anchored cable provides higher reaction force for the previous locations of the U-steel support in order to prevent deformation of support towards to excavation. As an integral structure, the U-steel support is confined to a limited deformation space under the action of anchored cable. The larger deformation is released through sliding motion of the overlapping parts so as to reach the ultimate of high supporting resistance of USS-AC. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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Kealy, Sean J.
Theory & Practice of Legislation . Jun-Aug2021, Vol. 9 Issue 2, p227-249. 23p.
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LEGISLATIVE bills, GOVERNMENT agencies, and LEGISLATION
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Legislative drafting in the United States Congress is a dynamic process with many actors working to revise both a bill's policy and language. Rather than a central drafting office or government agency responsible for drafting bills, legislative language and amendments come from many sources: Congressional committee staff, the House and Senate Offices of Legislative Counsel, special interest lobbyists, and executive agencies. The hope is that bills become stronger and better drafted as it moves through the process; but that is not always the case. In addition, Congress still does not use a single standard drafting style. Still, there have been improvements in recent decades. For example, the House of Representatives developed a preferred drafting style and created a manual to guide drafters. However, Congress can and should do more to improve legislative quality. In this article I suggest several reforms: empowering the committee chairs to not just guide legislation through Congress, but promote better quality legislation; requiring greater drafting style standardisation; creating new materials and trainings to assist legislative actors, particularly committee staff, to recognise defective drafting and appreciate the value of careful drafting practices; and creating a advisory commission that will bring together key drafting participants to propose further reforms. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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Algara, Carlos and Zamadics, Joseph
Journal of Legislative Studies . Jun2022, Vol. 28 Issue 2, p243-277. 35p.
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LEGISLATIVE voting, VOTING, and PRIMARIES
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Theoretical and empirical models of congressional voting assume that legislators vote with the sole purpose to move policy closer to their ideologically ideal point. While NOMINATE correctly classifies most votes cast by members of Congress, a significant number of votes are misclassified and coded as spatial error. The literature on congressional voting assumes this error to be random and idiosyncratic across members. We argue that spatial errors are systematic across members, with spatial error being more likely on roll-call votes tackling salient policy issues and among members representing constituencies with greater ideological divergence between the median voter and the member's primary election constituency. Using Aldrich-McKelvey scaling to place legislators and constituencies in the same ideological space, we find support for our theory. We attribute this finding to the electoral uncertainty faced by members of both the House and Senate representing constituencies with greater ideological divergence between these key electoral principals. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
57. Vote Switching in Multiparty Presidential Systems: Evidence from the Argentine Chamber of Deputies. [2022]
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Bonvecchi, Alejandro and Clerici, Paula
Legislative Studies Quarterly . May2022, Vol. 47 Issue 2, p397-426. 30p.
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PRESIDENTIAL system, LEGISLATIVE voting, VOTING, COMMITTEE reports, PARTISANSHIP, CONFLICT of interests, and IDEOLOGY
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Why do legislators switch their votes between the committee and floor stages in multiparty presidential systems? The literature on the US Congress has argued that switches are conditional on cross‐cutting pressures by competing principals (i.e., party leaders and interest groups), partisanship, electoral competitiveness, ideology, seniority, and informational updates. This article argues that unlike in the US two‐party system, in multiparty systems electoral competitiveness increases the likelihood of switching. Additionally, the practice of switching is more likely for legislators whose competing principals are leaders with conflicting electoral interests. We test these hypotheses analyzing vote switches between committee reports and roll‐call votes in the Argentine Chamber of Deputies. Our results indicate that legislative vote switching indeed behaves differently in multiparty than in a two‐party presidential system. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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Cottrell, David
Legislative Studies Quarterly . Aug2019, Vol. 44 Issue 3, p487-514. 28p.
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COMPUTER simulation, COMPUTER engineering, COMPUTER algorithms, and SET design
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Recent research has leveraged computer simulations to identify the effect of gerrymandering on partisan bias in U.S. legislatures. As a result of this method, researchers are able to distinguish between the intentional partisan bias caused by gerrymandering and the natural partisan bias that stems from the geographic sorting of partisan voters. However, this research has yet to explore the effect of gerrymandering on other biases like reduced electoral competition and incumbency protection. Using a computer algorithm to design a set of districts without political intent, I measure the extent to which the current districts have been gerrymandered to produce safer seats in Congress. I find that gerrymandering only has a minor effect on the average district, but does produce a number of safe seats for both Democrats and Republicans. Moreover, these safe seats tend to be located in states where a single party controls the districting process. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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59. Anticipating Unilateralism. [2022]
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Foster, David
Journal of Politics . Apr2022, Vol. 84 Issue 2, p1176-1188. 13p.
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EXECUTIVE power, PRESIDENTS of the United States, POWER (Social sciences), PRACTICAL politics, LEGISLATORS, and UNITED States politics & government
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Understanding unilateralism may require examining the conditions that precede and motivate the president's action. But if members of Congress can anticipate unilateral action, their failure to legislate cannot be explained by "gridlock intervals" in a standard spatial model. I argue instead that they may willingly surrender authority to the president to head off potential attacks from voters or interest groups. This helps to explain the president's accumulation of authority over time. More broadly, I argue that just as a large literature has examined outside pressure on Congress in isolation, we should examine its influence in the presence of the president's unilateral powers. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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Cervas, Jonathan R. and Grofman, Bernard
Social Science Quarterly (Wiley-Blackwell) . Jun2019, Vol. 100 Issue 4, p1322-1342. 21p. 3 Charts, 1 Graph.
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ELECTORAL college, POPULAR vote, PRESIDENTIAL elections, and DIRECT democracy
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Objectives: We offer a typology of possible reforms to the Electoral College (EC) in terms of changes to its two most important structural features: seat allocations that are not directly proportional to population and winner‐take‐all outcomes at the state level. This typology allows us to classify four major variants of "reform" to the present EC in a parsimonious fashion. Many of the proposals we consider have been suggested by well‐known figures, some debated in Congress, and they include what we view as most likely to be taken seriously. We evaluate these proposals solely in terms of one simple criterion: "Would they be expected to reduce the likelihood of inversions between EC and popular vote outcomes?" Methods: We answer this question by looking at the data on actual presidential election outcomes at the state level over the entire period 1868–2016, and at the congressional‐district level over the period 1956–2016. We consider the implications for presidential outcomes of these different alternative mechanisms, in comparison to the actual electoral outcome and the popular vote outcome. In addition, we consider the implications of a proposal to increase the size of the U.S. House (Ladewig and Jasinski, 2008). Results: Our results show that inversions from the popular vote happen under all proposed alternatives at nearly the same rate as under the current EC rules, with some proposals actually making inversions more frequent. Conclusions: The major difference between the present EC rule and alternative rules is not in frequency of inversions, but is in which particular years the inversions occur. As for the proposal to increase the size of the House, we show that any realistic increase in House size would have made no difference for the 2016 outcome. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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Binder, Sarah
Forum (2194-6183) . Feb2022, Vol. 19 Issue 4, p663-684. 22p.
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MAJORITIES, FILIBUSTERS (Political science), PARTISANSHIP, BIPARTISANSHIP, UNITED States senators, and COALITIONS
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The United States Senate is marching, Senate style, toward majority rule. Chamber rules have long required super, rather than simple, majorities to end debate on major and minor matters alike. But occasionally over its history – and several times over the past decade – the Senate has pared back procedural protections afforded to senators, making it easier for cohesive majorities to secure their policy goals. Both parties have pursued such changes – sometimes imposed by simple majority, other times by a bipartisan coalition. Why has the pace of change accelerated, and with what consequences for the Senate? In this article, I connect rising partisanship and electoral competition to the weakening of partisan commitments to Senate supermajority rule. No one can predict with any certainty whether the Senate will yet abolish the so-called "legislative filibuster." But pressures continue to mount towards that end. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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62. WHO DETERMINES MAJORNESS? [2021]
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SQUITIERI, CHAD
Harvard Journal of Law & Public Policy . Spring2021, Vol. 44 Issue 2, p463-522. 60p.
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GOVERNMENT policy, COURTS, DISCRETION, JUDICIAL discretion, CERTIORARI, and EN banc hearings
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The article analyzes the issue of who will determine majorness in the major questions doctrine involving U.S. policy. Topics discussed include the origin of the nondelegation and major questions doctrines, arguments supporting the attribution of majorness determination to the Congress or to the judiciary, and the need for textualists to exercise the grants of discretion given to courts in the certiorari and en banc processes to limit the nondelegation doctrine to major questions.
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Xiaoli Jin
International Social Science Review . 2019, Vol. 95 Issue 3, p1-27. 27p.
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COMMITTEES, DEMOCRATS (United States) -- Political activity, UNITED States political parties, UNITED States. Congress. House, and UNITED States politics & government
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The article informs that discusses how the U.S. House committee assignment has long been a widely-discussed topic in academic research due to its strategic legislative importance. Topics discussed include relationships between party loyalty and committee assignment; use of members' loyalty score as the degree of similarity between a member's roll-call voting record and that of the party's majority; and difference between Democrats and Republicans.
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Harvard Law Review . Jan2019, Vol. 132 Issue 3, p1067-1088. 22p.
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SECURITIES fraud -- Lawsuits & claims, CLASS actions, and PRICE maintenance
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The article discusses America's Congress in relation to an increase in securities-fraud (SF) class action lawsuits in the wake of the U.S. Supreme Court's (Court's) ruling in the 1988 SF case Basic Inc. v. Levinson. According to the article, class action litigation is ineffective at deterring SF and compensating victims. The SF case Halliburton Co. v. Erica P. John Fund, Inc. is assessed, along with a price-maintenance theory and the Court's effort to limit SF class actions.
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Clymer, Kenton
Diplomatic History . Jun2022, Vol. 46 Issue 3, p641-644. 4p.
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WAR on Terrorism, 2001-2009, CIVILIANS in war, CENTRALITY, WORLD War I, BROTHERLINESS, FILIPINO Americans, TERRORISM, and MILITARY bases
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I Bound by War i surveys the Philippine-U.S. relationship from U.S. acquisition in 1899 to the return of the Balangiga Bells (war booty from the Philippine-American War that followed annexation) in December 2018. Capozzola argues that the military connections were the relationship's most important aspect: "War shaped every aspect of the Pacific Century, from how Americans and Filipinos thought about each other to how they lived together" (7). These matters were most evident with Philippine Scouts and with those Filipinos who were allowed the join the U.S. Navy, most to serve as messmen and stewards (reflecting racial stereotypes). [Extracted from the article]
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Chaturvedi, Neilan S. and Haynes, Chris
Journal of Legislative Studies . Jun2022, Vol. 28 Issue 2, p179-194. 16p.
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DEMOCRATS (United States), REPUBLICANS, and ELECTIONS
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In this paper, we test the optimal position taking strategy for senators running for reelection vis-à-vis their party's president. Using data from a survey experiment conducted using a national sample, we examine the responses towards three hypothetical Democrats: (i) 'embracing' or supportive of Barack Obama (ii.) ambiguous about their attitude towards Obama (iii.) 'eschewing' or opposed to Obama. Comparing participants exposed to the ambiguous and the embracing Democrat, we find some evidence of a difference in candidate preference, but little evidence to suggest that the strategy gains votes. Comparing participants exposed to the eschewing Democrat to the embracing Democrat, we find that the strategy does yield some gains but these are offset by losses amongst the base. Overall, these findings suggest that the optimal reelection strategy for Democratic candidates is to remain supportive, unless they are running in areas with a high concentration of Republicans—then the eschew strategy can yield some gains. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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Lewallen, Jonathan and Sparrow, Bartholomew H.
Political Science Quarterly (Wiley-Blackwell) . Winter2018/2019, Vol. 133 Issue 4, p729-752. 24p.
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LEGISLATIVE voting, POLITICIANS, LEGISLATION, and UNITED States politics & government
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The article discusses the functions of the nonvoting congressional delegates or the Territorial Delegates compared with that of the other members of the U.S. House of Representatives and the responsibility of roll call voting for members of the U.S. Congress. Topics include the quality of the congressional representation of the U.S. territories and the District of Columbia and how representatives and delegates may be able to influence legislation and thereby signal their constituents, colleagues, and interest groups in ways other than roll call votes.
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68. Partisan Intensity in Congress: Evidence from Brett Kavanaugh's Supreme Court Nomination. [2021]
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Gelman, Jeremy
Political Research Quarterly . Jun2021, Vol. 74 Issue 2, p450-463. 14p.
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PARTISANSHIP and SELECTION & appointment of U.S. Supreme Court justices
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Partisan disputes are ubiquitous in Congress. Yet, participation in this bickering varies among legislators. Some eagerly join these fights while others abstain. What explains this variation? Previous research examines this question by studying members' partisan preferences expressed through votes or bill cosponsorships. However, preference-based studies miss much of the daily congressional bickering and cannot identify which legislators were most involved in the fighting. This paper considers lawmakers' partisan intensity, the time and effort they devote to partisanship. I argue the same factors that drive other forms of legislative participation—constituent demand, committee service, and a member's personal characteristics—also predict who joins a partisan dispute. Using Senators' daily Twitter communications during Brett Kavanaugh's Supreme Court confirmation, I show legislators' partisan intensity systematically varied based on these factors. In particular, I find that sexual assault allegations against Kavanaugh altered Senators' partisan behavior in a predictable manner. This study helps explain why legislators choose to create the partisan acrimony that is omnipresent on Capitol Hill and contributes to our understanding of partisanship, messaging politics, and how social identity affects legislative participation. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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69. The De‐Institutionalization of Congress. [2018]
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CHERGOSKY, A. N. T. H. O. N. Y. J. and ROBERTS, J. A. S. O. N. M.
Political Science Quarterly (Wiley-Blackwell) . Fall2018, Vol. 133 Issue 3, p475-495. 21p.
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DEINSTITUTIONALIZATION, DEMOCRATS (United States), REPUBLICANS, PUBLIC spending, GOVERNMENT policy, and UNITED States politics & government
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The article discusses how the deâ€Institutionalization of the U.S. Congress has affected its effectiveness and discusses the perception of the U.S. Congress' performance by Americans. Topics include the severe limitations of the U.S. Congress which includes arriving at a consensus on major policies, the gridlock cause due to the obstructive tactics in the Senate, how fundamental differences between the Democrats and Republicans affects policies on various issues like government spending, and the need for major structural reforms in the U.S. Congress.
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Primus, Richard
Michigan Law Review . Dec2018, Vol. 117 Issue 3, p415-497. 83p.
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CONSTITUTIONAL law, CONSTITUTIONAL history, and MCCULLOCH v. Maryland
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The idea that Congress can legislate only on the basis of its enumerated powers is an orthodox proposition of constitutional law, one that is generally supposed to have been recognized as essential ever since the Founding. Conventional understandings of several episodes in constitutional history reinforce this proposition. But the reality of many of those events is more complicated. Consider the 1791 debate over creating the Bank of the United States, in which Madison famously argued against the Bank on enumerated-powers grounds. The conventional memory of the Bank episode reinforces the sense that the orthodox view of enumerated powers has been fundamental, and agreed upon, from the beginning. But in 1791, Members of the First Congress disagreed about whether Congress needed to point to some specific enumerated power in order to create the Bank. Moreover, Madison's enumeratedpowers argument against the Bank seems to have involved two rethinkings of Congress's enumerated powers, one about the importance of enumeration in general and one about the enumeration's specific application to the Bank. At the general level, Madison in the Bank debate elevated the supposed importance of the enumerated-powers framework: in 1787 he had been skeptical that enumerating congressional powers could be valuable, but in the Bank debate he described the enumerated-powers framework as essential to the Constitution. At the particular level, Madison's enumerated-powers argument against the Bank seems to have been an act of last-minute creativity in which he took constitutional objections that sounded naturally in the register of affirmative prohibitions, but which the Constitution's text did not clearly support, and gave them a textual home by translating them into the register of enumerated powers. Madison's move may have set a paradigm for enumerated-powers arguments at later moments in constitutional history: subsequent enumerated-powers arguments down to those against the Affordable Care Act might be best understood as translations of constitutional objections best expressed in terms of affirmative prohibitions, forced into the register of enumerated powers because the relevant prohibitions are not found in the Constitution. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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Gregory, Anthony
Journal of the Early Republic . Winter2018, Vol. 38 Issue 4, p643-672. 30p.
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SOVEREIGNTY, AMERICAN Revolutionary War, 1775-1783, LEGISLATIVE power, STATE formation, and GREAT Britain-United States relations
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Hoping to win back the thirteen colonies, Parliament in 1778 relinquished its power over internal taxation and regulation and gave the Carlisle Peace Commission wide discretion to suspend British policies in order to negotiate a truce. Because the Continental Congress consistently rejected these peace offerings and achieved independence, few historians have given serious attention to the interaction between Congress and the Commissioners. This article argues that the process of rejecting the Commission's gestures marked an important watershed in the conceptualization of congressional power and national unity. Congress donned a public face of confidence and unanimity even as its leadership worried about dissent and disloyalty. This tension mirrored the paradoxes of American sovereignty, touted in terms of high principle and consent, but secured through force and diplomatic opportunism. The timing of the offers, after Saratoga and during negotiations for a French alliance, only highlighted the peculiarities of American sovereignty, which claimed command over as well as deference to the states. As the months passed, Congress and the Commissioners engaged in an argument over their authority to rule, exposing contradictions in their governing logic, and resorted increasingly to desperate appeals to the individual states and to shows of force to maintain mastery over the continent. Occurring at a unique moment in the reconciliation of the paradoxes of imperial sovereignty, Congress's response to the Commission deserves a special place in the history of the U.S. nation-state's formation. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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Chipman, Derek Russell
Berkeley Technology Law Journal . 2018, Vol. 33 Issue 4, p1067-1089. 23p.
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COPYRIGHT infringement, FAIR use (Copyright), and UNITED States. Digital Millennium Copyright Act
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The article focuses on U.S. Copyright Office's recent Section 1201 of Copyright Act Report for rejecting the nexus to copyright infringement requirement for liability. It mentions history of the Digital Millennium Copyright Act (DMCA) to determine Congress's intent and comparing this to the present application by copyright holders. It also mentions innovation and erosion of fair use caused by its passage and effect on legal activities that benefit the public.
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Seiglie, Carlos and Xiang, Jun
Defence & Peace Economics . Jun2022, Vol. 33 Issue 4, p489-495. 7p.
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MILITARY spending, ITEM response theory, LEGISLATORS, LEGISLATIVE voting, PUBLIC opinion, CAMPAIGN funds, and UNEMPLOYMENT statistics
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While a great deal of research has examined determinants of military spending, few studies have systematically investigated how legislators vote on defense expenditures. This study fills this important gap. Based on a sample of roll-call data on defense spending from the 112th U.S. House, we estimate legislators' ideal points through an item response model. Several interesting findings emerge. First, Republicans are more likely to favor military spending, a finding that is both statistically and substantively significant throughout our analysis. In addition, interest group campaign contributions play an important role by increasing the probability a legislator supports defense spending. Third, when a congressional district has a larger number of veterans or a lower rate of unemployment, its elected legislator is likely to favor military spending. Finally, the effect of public opinion disappears after the district demographics are controlled for. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
74. Questions of Order in the U.S. Senate: Procedural Uncertainty and the Role of the Parliamentarian. [2019]
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Madonna, Anthony J., Lynch, Michael S., and Williamson, Ryan D.
Social Science Quarterly (Wiley-Blackwell) . Jun2019, Vol. 100 Issue 4, p1343-1357. 15p. 1 Chart, 3 Graphs.
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LEGISLATIVE bodies -- Presiding officers, LOGISTIC regression analysis, PARTISANSHIP, and POLITICAL participation
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Objectives: Scholarship on the U.S. Senate has demonstrated the pivotal role the presiding officer can play when asked to interpret the chamber's rules and precedents. Therefore, our objective is to broadly evaluate how questions of order are arbitrated in the U.S. Senate. Methods: Using a multinomial logistic regression, we estimate the effect of partisanship on adjudicating questions of order in the Senate before and after the institutionalization of the parliamentarian. Results: Our results indicate that while short‐term partisan interests play an important role in determining how presiding officers interpret rules and precedents, the emergence of the Senate parliamentarian in the 1920s served to reduce uncertainty regarding procedural matters in the chamber. Conclusions: This change has led to fewer instances of partisan rulings on questions of order and raised the costs of executing a drastic change in Senate procedure via unorthodox procedures. However, the introduction of the parliamentarian has not reduced the likelihood a ruling is overturned. As such, more narrow procedural changes have been used to support majorities over time. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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Lee, Frances E.
Journal of Politics . Oct2018, Vol. 80 Issue 4, p1464-1473. 10p.
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LEGISLATIVE voting, BIPARTISANSHIP, CONCORD, and UNITED States political parties
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Given the size of their majorities and their level of voting cohesion, Republicans in the 115th Congress saw unified government under President Trump as a historic opportunity to enact their party’s priorities. Yet the legislative record of the 115th Congress has been less impressive than that of other recent majority parties in control of unified government. This article considers why a party that seemed so well positioned to deliver on its agenda has struggled to do so. It argues that the 115th Congress’s modest level of legislative achievement reflects a majority party that is much less internally unified on policy than its roll-call voting cohesion would suggest. The case of the 115th Congress invites scholars to reexamine their reliance on vote-based measures of party unity. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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Banker, Brett J.
Harvard Kennedy School Review . 2018, Vol. 18, p11-18. 8p.
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LAW reform and POSTAL laws
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The article focuses on the inability of the U.S. Congress in passing legislative reforms in area of U.S. Postal Service. It informs that the Postal Accountability and Enhancement Act requires that the U.S. Postal Regulatory Commission rate-setting practices, conduct a rate review ten years following enactment. It also informs on enactment of Postal Service Financial Improvement Act of 2017 for addressing the same.
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Dougherty, Keith L.
Political Research Quarterly . Dec2020, Vol. 73 Issue 4, p759-773. 15p.
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POLITICAL parties and LEGISLATORS
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This article examines the creation of political parties in Congress with a focus on ties between emerging party leaders and members, 1789–1802. Using an egocentric selection model, we examine who John Adams, Alexander Hamilton, Thomas Jefferson, and James Madison tied with as a function of the characteristics of the emerging leader, a member of Congress, and dyadic relationships between the two. We also examine whether ties affected the party chosen by members of Congress. Everything else equal, we find leaders were more likely to form ties with ideologically similar members, but find no evidence of them tieing with more pivotal voters. In response, members were more likely to join the Federalist party if they received a Federalist tie, but they were not more likely to join the Republican party if they received a Republican tie. Understanding such relationships is an important step for understanding the creation of parties in the United States. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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Russell, Annelise and Wen, Jiebing
Journal of Legislative Studies . Dec 2021, Vol. 27 Issue 4, p608-620. 13p.
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UNITED States legislators, MICROBLOGS, POLITICAL communication, MASS media policy, and RHETORIC
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Social media incentivizes members of Congress to routinely advertise their policy agenda for the public; however, it is unclear whether those expressed policy priorities are linked to their legislative behaviour. The incongruous nature of unlimited, online messages with constrained policy agendas necessitates assessing the association between what politicians say and their institutional actions. Using a dataset of senators' tweets from the 114th Congress, we analyse policy rhetoric on Twitter and bill sponsorship across a variety of issues in the Senate to show that senators' policy priorities on Twitter are representative of congressional activity. These results broaden the application of social media as a tool for policy agendas – extending theories of limited attention to lawmakers' political communication. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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Sanbonmatsu, Kira
Daedalus . Winter2020, Vol. 149 Issue 1, p40-55. 16p.
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AMERICAN women in politics, POLITICAL parties, SOCIAL movements, and PARTISANSHIP
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Women's elective office-holding stands at an all-time high in the United States. Yet women are far from parity. This underrepresentation is surprising given that more women than men vote. Gender–as a feature of both society and politics–has always worked alongside race to determine which groups possess the formal and informal resources and opportunities critical for winning elective office. But how gender connects to office-holding is not fixed; instead, women's access to office has been shaped by changes in law, policy, and social roles, as well as the activities and strategies of social movement actors, political parties, and organizations. In the contemporary period, data from the Center for American Women and Politics reveal that while women are a growing share of Democratic officeholders, they are a declining share of Republican officeholders. Thus, in an era of heightened partisan polarization, women's situation as candidates increasingly depends on party. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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Brown, Nadia E., Clark, Christopher J., and Mahoney, Anna
Journal of Women, Politics & Policy . Jul-Sep2022, Vol. 43 Issue 3, p328-346. 19p.
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WOMEN legislators, BLACK women, EDUCATIONAL attainment, and LEARNING
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Black women have been historically excluded from Congress and the policymaking power available in the institution. This essay shares details about the 52 Black women who have navigated this raced and gendered institution (Hawkesworth 2003) since 1969. We discuss data on these Black congresswomen, including, but not limited to, their educational attainment, occupations prior to serving in Congress, and ties to Black Greek Letter organizations. We argue that this descriptive data will prompt new questions for legislative scholars and open conversations about disciplinary norms and assumptions which may need revision in light of Congress' increasing diversification. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
81. The U.S. Congress Must Authorize Major Wars. [2016]
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Coll, Alberto R.
Governance . Jul2016, Vol. 29 Issue 3, p307-309. 3p.
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WAR, DECISION making, UNITED States history, and SPECIAL operations (Military science)
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The author focuses on the need for the U.S. Congress to authorize major wars. Topics discussed include the argument of professor John You regarding the war declaration by the U.S. Congress, the decision making process of the U.S. Congress throughout the history of the country, and the consideration of the military operations of the country against the militant group Islamic State (ISIS) as an example of case related to borderline.
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Ritchie, Melinda N. and You, Hye Young
Journal of Politics . Apr2021, Vol. 83 Issue 2, p421-438. 18p.
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WOMEN in politics, LEGISLATIVE bodies, GENDER inequality, SOCIAL conditions of women, and LEGISLATIVE body personnel
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We examine gender differences in policy influence and advancement within the congressional office context using US Congress payroll system data between 2001 and 2014. We document how congressional careers share structural features with nonpolitical occupations with gender gaps. We find that women staffers experience slower promotion and less compensation than men at the same rank and that the gender gap is most salient for positions presenting the greatest structural challenges for women. However, these differences are shaped by the salience of gender equality issues within the office, varying by legislators' party and gender and by the roles of other women within the office. Our analysis offers leverage for assessing previous explanations for women's underrepresentation among policy makers, suggesting that electoral factors, supply lag, and institutional inertia do not solely account for gender differences. However, the political context mitigates gender disparity because of the salience of gender equality within the political workplace. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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Basinger, Scott J.
Public Integrity . 2016, Vol. 18 Issue 4, p359-375. 17p. 1 Diagram, 5 Charts.
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ETHICS, POLITICAL ethics, POLITICAL corruption, SCANDALS, MISCONDUCT in office, and UNITED States. Congress
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This article uses new data to assess the impact of the Office of Congressional Ethics, established in 2009, to investigate ethical misconduct by members of the U.S. House of Representatives. A comparison of the 6 years immediately before reform (2003–2008) and the 6 years immediately after reform (2009–2014) reveals that the number of scandals actually increased by 60% after reform. Although the number of members investigated for malfeasance increased by 220%, the number of members sanctioned remained constant. However well-intentioned the reforms, they failed to stem the tide of scandal because they did not modify members’ incentives. Ironically, the reforms may have contributed to public dissatisfaction with Congress by publicizing investigations of members of Congress. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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84. THE PROPER ROLE OF THE SENATE. [2021]
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JOHN YOO
Harvard Journal of Law & Public Policy . Winter2021, Vol. 44 Issue 1, p47-55. 9p.
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CONSTITUTIONAL law and UNITED States politics & government
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The article focuses on discuss the proper role of the U.S. Senate. it mentions that Senate plays a healthy role in America's system of government as a force for deliberation and compromise. It also mentions that original version of the Constitution proposed a Senate that was elected by the House so that it still retained an indirectly majoritarian character.
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Zira, Joseph Dloma, Garbo, Hafsoh, Sidi, Mohammed, Silas, Moi, Nkubli, Flavious, Skam, Dimas, Ogenyi, Prince Ameh, Umar, Mohammed Soni, and Garbo, Mathew Abubakar
Pakistan Journal of Radiology . Jul-Sep2021, Vol. 31 Issue 3, p207-212. 6p.
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TEACHING hospitals, IONIZING radiation, PHYSICIANS, RADIATION protection, RADIATION, PICTURE archiving & communication systems, and DIAGNOSTIC ultrasonic imaging personnel
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BACKGROUND: Radiological examinations are of great importance in the field of Medicine. The dose of radiation given in any diagnostic procedure should be enough to answer the relevant clinical question, but as low as reasonably achievable to lower the risk to the patient. Therefore, it is important that physicians requesting the imaging are well-trained in deciding the diagnostic imaging indicated, and have an accurate knowledge of the associated risks. AIM: To evaluate the knowledge of radiation dose for commonly performed radiological examinations among referring physicians in Aminu Kano teaching hospital (AKTH). METHOD: This was a prospective and study conducted at AKTH, Kano, Northwestern Nigeria. A questionnaire was distributed to all cadres of medical doctors apart from Radiologists. Radiological investigations were listed and participants were asked to estimate equivalent doses using the dose of posteroanterior chest x-ray as a reference. Questions on knowledge of radiation hazard, radiation measurement units, and the use of referral guidelines were also included. A total score was aggregated for each question. RESULT: A total of 90 questionnaires were distributed, and 70 were returned. The gender for the study includes 65. 7% male and 34.3% females. Most of the physicians knew about ionizing radiation but very few of them (2.9%) knew its unit of measurement. The majority of the physicians were unable to estimate the doses for most of the radiological exams. Only 32.9% of the physicians were familiar with the stochastic and non-stochastic effects of radiation. Knowledge of the use of referral guidelines was found to be average, while knowledge on the non-ionizing nature of USS was adequate but for MRI it was found very insufficient (5.7%). CONCLUSION: These study findings revealed that most physicians were aware of radiation hazard but did not have appropriate awareness about radiation dose delivered by different imaging modalities and the effects of irradiation. Implementation of radiation protection courses and education on practical users, including radiation dose received by patients, radiation safety and justification of referral for imaging to physicians could be an effective method to reduce patient dose in medical exposures. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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Blair, Peter D
Science & Public Policy (SPP) . Apr2021, Vol. 48 Issue 2, p164-176. 13p.
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TECHNOLOGY assessment, ADVICE, GOVERNMENT accountability, and TIME
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Effective science and technology (S&T) assessment capabilities providing advice for Congress must be both credible and suitable to congressional needs. To be credible, from the perspective of those who will use the advice, its provision must be (1) authoritative, (2) objective, and (3) independent. To be suitable, the advice must be (4) relevant, (5) useful, and (6) timely. For S&T advice today, Congress draws on many sources but four traditional options stand out as having been used most frequently: (1) The National Research Council, the operating arm of the National Academies of Sciences, Engineering and Medicine, (2) The Congressional Research Service, (3) the former Office of Technology Assessment, and (4) the Government Accountability Office. This article chronicles the evolution of these four organizations and evaluates their relative strengths and weaknesses in terms of the six defined key characteristics for providing effective S&T advice for Congress, drawing conclusions for organizational improvements. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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87. RETHINKING THE SENATE. [2021]
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BAKER, LYNN A.
Harvard Journal of Law & Public Policy . Winter2021, Vol. 44 Issue 1, p39-46. 8p.
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CONSTITUTIONAL law and FEDERAL government of the United States
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The article discusses the proper role of the Senate in the U.S. It mentions that it tends to erode the federalist system by promoting the power of small-population states over large-population states. It also mentions that problem is also what the U.S. Supreme Court has done since the Founding, by taking provisions of the Constitution such as the spending power and rendering essentially meaningless or nonjusticiable notions that could provide constraints on congressional power.
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Ziniel, Curtis E
Ethnic & Racial Studies . Dec 2021, Vol. 44 Issue 15, p2836-2856. 21p. 2 Charts, 2 Graphs.
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CIVIL service, EMPLOYMENT, RACE, and EMPLOYMENT of minorities
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Members of the United States House of Representatives disproportionately hire Black and Hispanic staffers into constituent service focussed roles as compared to policy development positions. Minority staffers are also underrepresented in the highest paid (arguably the most influential) positions in Congressional offices. I demonstrate these racial employment patterns using a Dirichlet-multinomial likelihood model to investigate a novel dataset that includes information on all of the staffers employed in the offices of 211 US House Members in the 108th Congress. This research compares the patterns of both Black and Hispanic staffers and draws from a more comprehensive sample than previous studies on staff race. The racial asymmetries found in staffers' roles and responsibilities are cause for concern regarding the voice minorities have in Congressional policymaking. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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COGAN JR., JOHN ALOYSIUS
Boston College Law Review . 2021 Supplement, Vol. 62, p11-31. 21p.
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CORONAVIRUS Aid, Relief, & Economic Security Act (U.S.), UNCONSTITUTIONAL conditions doctrine (Law), ECONOMIC security, and PATIENT Protection & Affordable Care Act
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In California v. Texas, opponents of the Affordable Care Act (ACA) have asked the Supreme Court to invalidate the statute. Relying on a 2017 legislative change to the ACA's individual mandate, the challengers argue that the mandate is unconstitutional. They then assert that the mandate is inseverable from the rest of the ACA, thus the entire statute must fall. Earlier this year, however, Congress said otherwise. Last March, Congress passed the Families First Coronavirus Response Act and the Coronavirus Aid, Relief, and Economic Security Act. The two statutes amend and expand provisions of the ACA, thereby overriding Texas v. United States, the district court decision that underlies California v. Texas. In short, Congress has already ruled, via an override, on the severability question at issue in California v. Texas. The ACA stands, even with an unconstitutional individual mandate. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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Turner II, Frederick W. and Fox, Bryanna Hahn
Police Practice & Research . Apr2019, Vol. 20 Issue 2, p122-138. 17p.
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LAW enforcement, SENTIMENT analysis, MILITARISM, MILITARY weapons, and DEFENSE procurement
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Despite the dramatic rise in use of militarized weapons, equipment, and tactics by police departments across the nation, no study has examined the opinions of those responsible for designing, funding, and implementing police militarization in the United States. Therefore this study collected and analyzed opinion data from 465 key stakeholders from the 114th Congress U.S. House of Representatives, law enforcement executives, and local police officers regarding police militarization. Results suggest that while most practitioners and policymakers favor police militarization, Congress and law enforcement differ in support of critical issues such as oversight of military procurement programs, use of surplus military weapons and vehicles, and overall support for the militarization of policing in the United States. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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Algara, Carlos
Political Behavior . Mar2021, p1-41.
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While scholars posit an electoral link between congressional approval and majority party electoral fortunes, it is unclear whether citizens are grounding their assessments of approval on policy or valence grounds, such as retrospective economic evaluations. Whereas it is commonly understood that there is an ideological component to constituents’ job approval of their individual members of Congress, in addition to a strong partisan effect, the ideological basis of institutional approval has not been established. Using cross-sectional and panel survey data, which allow for scaling citizens and the congressional parties in the same ideological space, I demonstrate that, distinct from the partisan basis of congressional approval, citizens’ ideological distance from the majority party has a separate and distinct effect. These results suggest that the link between congressional approval and majority party fortunes is rooted in the collective ideological representation provided by the legislative majority in an increasingly responsible U.S. Congress. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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Edwards, George C.
Presidential Studies Quarterly . Mar2021, Vol. 51 Issue 1, p4-34. 31p. 2 Charts.
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EXECUTIVE-legislative relations, POLITICAL agenda, LEGISLATION, and UNITED States Congressional elections, 2018
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Donald Trump came to the presidency claiming a unique proficiency in negotiating deals. Once in office, however, he floundered. He adopted a passive approach to agenda setting, putting him in a reactive mode. Although he received high levels of support from Republicans in both chambers of Congress and although their leaders kept votes that he might lose off the agenda, Congress passed little significant legislation at his behest. The president received historically low levels of support from Democratic senators and representatives and could not win congressional assent for new healthcare policy, immigration reform, or infrastructure spending. Government shutdowns and symbolic slaps at his foreign policies characterized his tenure, even with his party in control of the legislature. He was even less successful after Democrats gained control of the House in the 2018 midterm elections. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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Long, Emma
Armed Forces & Society (0095327X) . Jul2022, Vol. 48 Issue 3, p589-608. 20p.
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MILITARY life, LIFE partners, MILITARY dependents, DEPLOYMENT (Military strategy), and MILITARY research
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The emotional cycle of deployment theorized by Logan and adapted by Pincus, House, Christenson, and Alder is often applied by academics and military support agencies to define, explain, and provide advice on the experiences and possible emotional reactions of military families during phases of deployment. Interviews with army partners showed that spatiotemporal experiences and perspectives are more complex than those afforded by the emotional cycle of deployment. This article argues that applying the concept of liminality uncovers some of this complexity, illuminating the in-between times experienced during deployments that are otherwise hidden. Army partners move through and between deployments and deployment phases haunted by specters of past and future deployments. By disrupting seemingly chronological and discrete spatiotemporal narratives, which often frame research on military families and deployment, this article demonstrates how army partners move through and between deployments and deployment stages negotiating past and future deployments. It shows how they continuously adapt and evolve practices while negotiating interpreted pasts and imagined futures in pursuit of becoming "ideal." [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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94. A Bulla of ʾӐdōnîyāhû, the One Who Is Over the House, from beneath Robinson's Arch in Jerusalem. [2022]
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Vanderhooft, David S., Richey, Madadh, and Shukron, Eli
Tel Aviv: Journal of the Institute of Archaeology of Tel Aviv Univeristy . Jun2022, Vol. 49 Issue 1, p54-66. 13p.
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PUBLIC officers and TOMBS
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The present paper publishes a new, nearly complete bulla excavated in 2013 beneath Robinson's Arch in Jerusalem. It was first identified in 2019 during sifting of soil excavated from a Roman-era drainage channel. The bulla belonged to a Judahite government official, 'the One Who Is Over the House'. The excavation of this bulla validates the authenticity of several other bulla bearing the same legend and clarifies both epigraphic and biblical attestations of the title 'the One Who Is Over the House'. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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Petkevic, Vladislav and Nai, Alessandro
American Politics Research . May2022, Vol. 50 Issue 3, p279-302. 24p.
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SOCIAL media, AUTOMATIC classification, ELECTIONS, CLASSIFICATION, POLITICAL campaigns, OFFENSIVE behavior, and VIDEO coding
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Negativity in election campaign matters. To what extent can the content of social media posts provide a reliable indicator of candidates' campaign negativity? We introduce and critically assess an automated classification procedure that we trained to annotate more than 16,000 tweets of candidates competing in the 2018 Senate Midterms. The algorithm is able to identify the presence of political attacks (both in general, and specifically for character and policy attacks) and incivility. Due to the novel nature of the instrument, the article discusses the external and convergent validity of these measures. Results suggest that automated classifications are able to provide reliable measurements of campaign negativity. Triangulations with independent data show that our automatic classification is strongly associated with the experts' perceptions of the candidates' campaign. Furthermore, variations in our measures of negativity can be explained by theoretically relevant factors at the candidate and context levels (e.g., incumbency status and candidate gender); theoretically meaningful trends are also found when replicating the analysis using tweets for the 2020 Senate election, coded using the automated classifier developed for 2018. The implications of such results for the automated coding of campaign negativity in social media are discussed. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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Flavin, Patrick and Franko, William W.
Political Behavior . Sep2020, Vol. 42 Issue 3, p845-864. 20p. 1 Diagram, 5 Charts.
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SEGREGATION of African Americans, HOUSING discrimination, SEGREGATION, GOVERNMENT policy, PUBLIC opinion, and LEGISLATIVE voting
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As levels of residential economic segregation increase in the United States, politicians may have greater incentives to focus their attention on the demands of those living in wealthier communities at the expense of those living in less affluent areas. To better understand the link between economic context and political representation, we develop a measure of economic segregation at the local level and combine public policy preferences and multiple roll call votes in the House of Representatives over several sessions to measure policy responsiveness. Our empirical analysis presents evidence that, regardless of one's individual level of income, citizens who live in an area of concentrated affluence are better represented by their Member of Congress. Conversely, citizens who live in an area of concentrated poverty are poorly represented. Importantly, we also show that the disproportionate focus affluent areas receive from congressional campaigns and the disproportionate campaign contributions that flow from those areas are two possible mechanisms that explain the relationship between economic context and political representation. These findings suggest that growing residential economic segregation in the United States has important implications for our understanding of political equality and the responsiveness of elected officials to public opinion. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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HORSTEMEIER-ZRNICH, IZAAK
Cleveland State Law Review . 2021, Vol. 69 Issue 4, p927-951. 25p.
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COPYRIGHT infringement and MARVEL Universe
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Following failed discussions between Marvel and Sony regarding the use of Spider-Man in the Marvel Cinematic Universe, comic fans were left curious as to how Spider-Man could remain outside of the public domain after decades of the character's existence. The comic community came to realize that Marvel was restricted in the use of its own character because of the Sonny Bono Copyright Term Extension Act of 1998 and the Supreme Court's decision in Eldred v. Ashcroft. This realization sparked an online conversation regarding the United States' lengthy copyright terms, and what many refer to as a "broken" copyright system. The conversations regarding copyright law arose at a pertinent time. In December 2020, Congress passed the Copyright Alternative in Small-Claims Enforcement Act of 2019. Following its passage, copyright holders now have an avenue to adjudicate "small" infringement claims. While a copyright small claims court could be a useful tool for copyright owners to enforce their property rights, it could also result in liability for a large number of Americans who unknowingly infringe on copyrighted material. This Note proposes that copyright formalities, namely registration and recordation, should be reintroduced in an effort to reduce the likelihood that creators incur liability for infringement. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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Amodio, Francesco, Baccini, Leonardo, Chiovelli, Giorgio, and Di Maio, Michele
Journal of Politics . Apr2022, Vol. 84 Issue 2, p1244-1249. 6p.
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COMMERCIAL treaties, CROP yields, LEGISLATORS, FREE trade, AGRICULTURAL policy, and LEGISLATIVE voting
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Does comparative advantage explain legislators' support for trade liberalization? We use data on potential crop yields as determined by weather and soil characteristics to derive a new plausibly exogenous measure of comparative advantage in agriculture for each district in the United States. Evidence shows that comparative advantage in agriculture predicts how legislators vote on the ratification of preferential trade agreements in Congress. We show that legislators in districts with high agricultural comparative advantage are more likely to mention that trade agreements are good for agriculture in House floor debates preceding roll call votes on their ratifications. Individuals living in the same districts are also more likely to support free trade. Our analysis and results contribute to the literature on the political economy of trade and its distributional consequences and to our understanding of the economic determinants of legislators' voting decisions. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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Volden, Craig and Wiseman, Alan E.
Journal of Politics . Apr2018, Vol. 80 Issue 2, p731-735. 5p.
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UNITED States senators, HIERARCHIES, and LEGISLATION
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Just like members of the House, US senators vary in how effective they are at lawmaking. We create Legislative Effectiveness Scores for each senator in each of the 93rd-113th Congresses (1973-2015). We use these scores to explore common claims about institutional differences in lawmaking between the House and the Senate. Our analysis offers strong support for the claim that the Senate is a more egalitarian and individualistic lawmaking body, in comparison to the relatively hierarchical institutional structure of the House. The scores developed here offer scholars numerous opportunities to explore important lawmaking phenomena. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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Chaturvedi, Neilan S.
Social Science Quarterly (Wiley-Blackwell) . Nov2017, Vol. 98 Issue 5, p1250-1263. 14p. 4 Charts, 3 Graphs.
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UNITED States senators -- Attitudes, DEMOCRATS (United States), REPUBLICANS, and MEDICARE laws
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Objectives Spatial voting literature on Congress indicates that the most powerful members are the ones who sit in the ideological center. This study examines how pivotal voters use that power in their participation in Congress. Methods This study examines two modes of congressional participation on two highly salient health-care bills-the filing of amendments and the delivery of floor speeches. Results This study finds that pivotal voters shy away from the legislative limelight. Pivotal voters choose to avoid the public eye by rarely proposing amendments or delivering floor speeches on these bills. Conclusions While theoretically pivotal, centrists who play the role of pivotal voters are more concerned about their electoral prospects than their legislative prowess and, as a result, defer congressional participation to party and committee leaders so as to avoid the ire of constituents. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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