000 02203 a2200325 4500
001 200044041
999 _c200044041
_d24190
003 TR-AnTOB
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020 _a0472067907 (paper)
020 _a0472097903 (cloth ; acid free paper)
040 _aDLC
_cDLC
_dDLC
_dTR-AnTOB
041 _aeng
050 0 0 _aJF511
_b.L44 2005
090 _aJF511 .L44 2005
245 0 0 _aLegislatures :
_bcomparative perspectives on representative assemblies /
_cedited by Gerhard Loewenberg, Peverill Squire, and D. Roderick Kiewiet.
264 1 _aAnn Arbor :
_bUniversity of Michigan Press,
_cc2002, 2005
300 _aviii, 414 p. :
_bill. ;
_c24 cm.
504 _aIncludes bibliographical references and index.
505 _a1.The implications of the study of the U.S. Congress for comparative legislative research -- 2.Legislative careers: why and how we should study them -- 3.Recruitment and retention in U.S. legislatures -- 4.Recruitment and retention in Western European parliaments -- 5.Recruitment and retention of legislators in Brazil -- 6.Electoral systems and the representation of minority interests in legislatures -- 7.The study of Japan's medium-sized district system -- 8.Divided parties, divided government -- 9.Positive theories of congressional parties -- 10. On the effects of legislative rules -- 11.Parliamentary floor voting procedures and agenda setting in Europe -- 12.Transitional governance in the United States: lessons from the First Federal Congress -- 13.Politicians, bureaucrats, and interest groups in Japan: transformation from one-party predominance or not? -- 14.Change is short but continuity is long: policy influence of the National Assembly in newly democratized Korea -- 15.Legislative autonomy in new regimes: the Czech and Polish cases -- 16.Assessing comparative legislative research.
650 7 _aKarşılaştırmalı yönetim
_2
_924232
650 0 _aLegislative bodies
_980357
650 0 _aYasama organları
_980356
650 0 _aComparative government
_964
700 1 _aKiewiet, D. Roderick
_980352
700 1 _aSquire, Peverill
_980353
700 1 _aLoewenberg, Gerhard
_980354
942 _cBK