We analyze informational lobbying in the context of a multimember legislature that decides on the allocation of a public good. First, we observe that a majoritarian legislature provides widely different incentives for interest groups to lobby than a single decision maker does. Second, we compare a decentralized legislature, such as the U.S. Congress, to a parliament with strong party cohesion. Congress\u27s decentralized nature allows the strategic formation of policy coalitions among high-demand districts and the exclusion of low-demand districts. This increases the incentive to provide information about districts\u27 demand relative to a legislature in which the governing coalition is fixed
This paper uses a mechanism design approach to characterize the optimal organization of lobbying gro...
Delegate conceptions of representation require activities of legislators to reflect their constituen...
This Version Abstract: This paper uses a mechanism design approach to characterize the opti-mal orga...
We analyze informational lobbying in the context of a multimember legislature that decides on the al...
We analyze informational lobbying in the context of multi-member legislatures. We show that a single...
We use a mechanism design approach to study the organization of interest groups in an informational ...
Abstract: We use a mechanism design approach to study the organization of interest groups in an info...
I analyze a model of interest group influence on legislative voting through information trans-missio...
Why do interest groups lobby allied legislators if they already agree? One possibility is that allie...
In this paper, we develop a duopolistic model of legislative lobbying. Two lobbies compete to inuenc...
Previous research has shown that if countries ”merge”, (i.e. move to centralized policy choices) the...
For most congressional legislation, committee consideration is the first and most drastic winnowing ...
We use a mechanism design approach to study the organization of interest groups in an informational ...
We examine the consequences of lobbying and vote buying, assuming this prac-tice were allowed and fr...
Using extensive interview and committee testimony data across two contrasting sets of interests (env...
This paper uses a mechanism design approach to characterize the optimal organization of lobbying gro...
Delegate conceptions of representation require activities of legislators to reflect their constituen...
This Version Abstract: This paper uses a mechanism design approach to characterize the opti-mal orga...
We analyze informational lobbying in the context of a multimember legislature that decides on the al...
We analyze informational lobbying in the context of multi-member legislatures. We show that a single...
We use a mechanism design approach to study the organization of interest groups in an informational ...
Abstract: We use a mechanism design approach to study the organization of interest groups in an info...
I analyze a model of interest group influence on legislative voting through information trans-missio...
Why do interest groups lobby allied legislators if they already agree? One possibility is that allie...
In this paper, we develop a duopolistic model of legislative lobbying. Two lobbies compete to inuenc...
Previous research has shown that if countries ”merge”, (i.e. move to centralized policy choices) the...
For most congressional legislation, committee consideration is the first and most drastic winnowing ...
We use a mechanism design approach to study the organization of interest groups in an informational ...
We examine the consequences of lobbying and vote buying, assuming this prac-tice were allowed and fr...
Using extensive interview and committee testimony data across two contrasting sets of interests (env...
This paper uses a mechanism design approach to characterize the optimal organization of lobbying gro...
Delegate conceptions of representation require activities of legislators to reflect their constituen...
This Version Abstract: This paper uses a mechanism design approach to characterize the opti-mal orga...