Loading... Please wait...


 

Indirect Effect Of Direct Legislation: How Institutions Shape Interest Group Sy

Frederick J. Boehmke

Hardback

Free delivery delivery information

Generally shipped in 3 to 5 weeks

You should expect to receive this within 10-15 working days after dispatch

Shipping from our overseas suppliers directly to you and sent via International Post

More delivery info

Rating by 0 customers, Add your review

Be the first to like this

Learn More

You can use the 'like' button to provide positive feedback on products, reviews and other features on the website. 'Like' is similar to voting and will be used to present the most popular content. Once you have clicked 'like', you cannot 'unlike'. You can only 'like' something once.

NOT IN STOCK delivery information

Typically shipped in 3 to 5 weeks

Price: $97.95

If you enjoyed this product, share it with others

Indirect Effect Of Direct Legislation: How Institutions Shape Interest Group Sy

Synopsis

"Frederick J. Boehmke's book makes explicit the many consequences - intended and unintended - of having direct legislation possible in a state. Many studies of the initiative process argue that it is a flawed process that rewards wealthy interests. While evidence to support this conclusion is often drawn from a number of high-profile, high-expenditure initiative campaigns, ballot campaigns are merely one consequence of the initiative process. The ability to propose legislation directly to the people fundamentally changes the process through which citizens are represented by organized interest groups, benefiting typically underrepresented interests." "To demonstrate this, the author models the incentives that the initiative process creates for interests to organize and for how they communicate their preferences to policy makers. Interests that represent a broader range of the public are found to gain the most from the option to propose initiatives, implying that the set of organized interests in initiative states should reflect this advantage. Ironically, an effect of direct legislation is to potentially increase the effectiveness of special interest lobbying in state legislatures - in a sense, the opposite of the direct control that gives direct legislation its theoretical appeal. Yet, the clear effect is one of empowering voices that traditionally had very little effect in the legislative process. If greater representation is the goal of direct legislation, it is a clear success, even though that success does not really come in the act of ballot initiatives itself."--BOOK JACKET.Title Summary field provided by Blackwell North America, Inc. All Rights Reserved

Product Details

ISBN:
9780814209967
Category:
General
Format:
Hardback
Publication Date:
2005-07-22
Publisher:
Ohio State University Press
Illustrations:
illustrations
Country of origin:
United States
Pages:
285
Dimensions (mm):
236x164x20mm
Weight:
458g

Customer Reviews

Average rating from customers

Zero Stars
  • Be the first to review Indirect Effect Of Direct Legislation: How Institutions Shape Interest Group Sy

see all reviews

Your Recent History