A number of U.S. states currently impose some form of legislative term limits in order to ensure competition and accountability among elected officials. However, some argue that term limits actually make legislators less responsible to their constituents, causing them to abstain from more votes and shirk their duties. Jennifer Hayes Clark and R. Lucas Williams argue that the willingness to shirk depends more on future career goals and the type of vote rather than term limits alone
Periodic elections are the main instrument through which voters can hold politicians accountable. Fr...
Term limit laws for state legislators now exist in 19 states. While these laws were passed as early ...
We exploit variation in U.S. gubernatorial term limits across states and time to empirically estimat...
Term limits on legislators were adopted in 21 states during the early 1990s. Beginning in 1996, the ...
In this article, I examine how term limits affect the amount of time that legislators focus on const...
Periodic elections are the main instrument through which voters can hold politicians accountable. Fr...
2 After an unusually swift reform movement in the 1990s, 15 states are now adjusting to the most sig...
Supporters of term limits argued that they would decrease interest group influence. Using data from ...
Through citizen initiative in 1993, Maine passed a term limits bill that now prevents legislators wi...
International audienceIn 1990, more than two centuries after Jefferson’s proposal of limiting re-ele...
The use of racially charged imagery and messages has a long history in US politics. But how do such ...
Do term limits make state legislatures more descriptively representative of their population? If the...
Using campaign contributions to legislators as an indicator of member influence, we explore the impa...
This paper analyses the impact of term limits in a political agency model. We find that term limits ...
In this paper, I examine how term limits affect the amount of time legislators focus on constituency...
Periodic elections are the main instrument through which voters can hold politicians accountable. Fr...
Term limit laws for state legislators now exist in 19 states. While these laws were passed as early ...
We exploit variation in U.S. gubernatorial term limits across states and time to empirically estimat...
Term limits on legislators were adopted in 21 states during the early 1990s. Beginning in 1996, the ...
In this article, I examine how term limits affect the amount of time that legislators focus on const...
Periodic elections are the main instrument through which voters can hold politicians accountable. Fr...
2 After an unusually swift reform movement in the 1990s, 15 states are now adjusting to the most sig...
Supporters of term limits argued that they would decrease interest group influence. Using data from ...
Through citizen initiative in 1993, Maine passed a term limits bill that now prevents legislators wi...
International audienceIn 1990, more than two centuries after Jefferson’s proposal of limiting re-ele...
The use of racially charged imagery and messages has a long history in US politics. But how do such ...
Do term limits make state legislatures more descriptively representative of their population? If the...
Using campaign contributions to legislators as an indicator of member influence, we explore the impa...
This paper analyses the impact of term limits in a political agency model. We find that term limits ...
In this paper, I examine how term limits affect the amount of time legislators focus on constituency...
Periodic elections are the main instrument through which voters can hold politicians accountable. Fr...
Term limit laws for state legislators now exist in 19 states. While these laws were passed as early ...
We exploit variation in U.S. gubernatorial term limits across states and time to empirically estimat...