This paper examines the primary categories of dysfunction in the Canadian and American legislatures. The central purpose of this comparative analysis is to explore the range of phenomena associated with legislative dysfunction in both the Canadian Parliament and the United States Congress. The Canadian and American cases are compared for the insights that two different institutional settings and political cultures can provide into the emergence of an interplay among dimensions of dysfunction. My intention is to fill the void of thorough literature on this subject, most specifically in Canada, by categorizing the wide scope of sources of legislative dysfunction into three main classifications - Institutional, Ideological, and Sociological. T...
There are three exhaustive and mutually exclusive models that characterize legislatures: the governm...
A critical examination of Canadian regulatory governance and politics over the past fifty years, Rul...
Legislators have the power to make, edit, and retract laws, but what motivates the individual legisl...
The public has traditionally viewed lobbying with disdain; notions of “back room deals” and “bought ...
This dissertation considers two aspects of legislative representation: (1) how citizens use informa...
Dyadic representation has received considerable attention in the US, but much less attention in parl...
Is America’s political dysfunction connected to the design of the Constitution? This Essay argues th...
This chapter analyzes national parliaments from an international comparative perspective. Scholars t...
Over the past five years, legislative studies have emerged as a field of inquiry in political scienc...
Much has been written in recent years about America’s political dysfunction, and whether it stems fr...
Divided government in Canada refers to the common situation when the federal and provincial governm...
Despite their prevalence, the study of Canadian minority governments has been the object of few publ...
We analyze legislative votes in the 35th (1994-97) and 38th (2004-05) Canadian Parliaments over a mu...
This Project examined the relevance of the Parliamentary Legislature in Canada from the point of vie...
Parliamentary government in Canada : institutional stability and constitutional reform in the legisl...
There are three exhaustive and mutually exclusive models that characterize legislatures: the governm...
A critical examination of Canadian regulatory governance and politics over the past fifty years, Rul...
Legislators have the power to make, edit, and retract laws, but what motivates the individual legisl...
The public has traditionally viewed lobbying with disdain; notions of “back room deals” and “bought ...
This dissertation considers two aspects of legislative representation: (1) how citizens use informa...
Dyadic representation has received considerable attention in the US, but much less attention in parl...
Is America’s political dysfunction connected to the design of the Constitution? This Essay argues th...
This chapter analyzes national parliaments from an international comparative perspective. Scholars t...
Over the past five years, legislative studies have emerged as a field of inquiry in political scienc...
Much has been written in recent years about America’s political dysfunction, and whether it stems fr...
Divided government in Canada refers to the common situation when the federal and provincial governm...
Despite their prevalence, the study of Canadian minority governments has been the object of few publ...
We analyze legislative votes in the 35th (1994-97) and 38th (2004-05) Canadian Parliaments over a mu...
This Project examined the relevance of the Parliamentary Legislature in Canada from the point of vie...
Parliamentary government in Canada : institutional stability and constitutional reform in the legisl...
There are three exhaustive and mutually exclusive models that characterize legislatures: the governm...
A critical examination of Canadian regulatory governance and politics over the past fifty years, Rul...
Legislators have the power to make, edit, and retract laws, but what motivates the individual legisl...