The rise of an immensely powerful federal government in the twentieth century has tended to obscure the importance of state and local government in American history. Yet government at these lesser levels had the most direct and continuous effect on the lives of ordinary citizens. Through an analysis of late-nineteenth-century state legislatures in Illinois, Iowa, and Wisconsin,Ballard Campbell has written what one expert has called "the best book on legislative politics, past or present." The period he examines was one of rapid change and great challenge. Urbanization, industrialization, and increasing national integration forced innumerable difficult and important decisions on state legislators. Campbell is sensitive to these stresses on law-making, and skillfully analyzes the interplay between personal and constituent factors that affected lawmakers.
The author differentiates clearly between local and general aspects of state policymaking, giving full consideration to its more subjective and idiosyncratic elements. His comparison of partisan, economic, urban, ethnocultural, and regional influences on legislative behavior will serve as a model for all future studies.
By closely examining the substantive dimension of the governmental process and its relation to mass politics, Representative Democracy advances "the new political history." Campbell's discussion of legislative composition and procedure, the content and context of contested issues, and responses to these issues challenges numerous stereotypes about American state legislatures.
Although we tend to use the terms "representative democracy" and "democracy" as synonyms, they are not. Democracy means that the people govern; representative democracy means that the people elect others to govern for them.
A survey of democratic institutions and republics reveals the aristocratic origins of democracy.
But here, taking as her guide Thomas Paine’s subversive view that “Athens, by representation, would have surpassed her own democracy,” Nadia Urbinati challenges this accepted wisdom, arguing that political representation deserves to ...
Why People Don't Trust Government . Cambridge , Mass .: Harvard University Press . O'Leary , Kevin . 1996. ... Petty , Richard E. , and John T. Cacioppo . 1990. “ Involvement and Persuasion : Tradition versus Integration .
Despite all the arguing from politicians, special interests, and political parties, Americans basically agree on the most important political issues. If only our legislators would stop fighting over obtuse policy...
This is a reasoned but passionate look at how Reaganism—the political philosophy of Ronald Reagan—has severely damaged representative democracy as created by the nation's founders.
American Journal of Political Science 37, no. 4 (November 1993): 1179–206. What Americans Know about Politics and Why It Matters. New Haven, CT: Yale University Press, 1996. DePaulo, Bella M., James J. Lindsay, Brian E. Malone, et al.
Terry M. Moe , “ Political Institutions : The Neglected Side of the Story , " Journal of Law , Economics , and ... as was the case with former Senate Majority Leader George Mitchell and the late Senator Frank Church , chair of the ...
Sims (1964), 27 Rhode Island legislature, 142, 145, 318 Rhyme, Nancy, 287n15 Richardson, Bill, 153 Richardson, Bobby, 253 Richardson, H.L., 83n51, 162n1, 166n96, 167n118, 167n125, 290n92, 291n118, 292n140, 292n146 Richardson, James, ...
This book contains Mill's arguments in favor of a representative form of government, which was in Mill's view the ideal form a government should take. Mill thought that the best...