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  • 17 March 2013

    Planted by MSS
    Planted in: ACADEMIC WORK; USA

    The draft chapters for a co-authored book project in which I am involved are posted on my academic pages for anyone who might be interested.

    A DIFFERENT DEMOCRACY?

    A Systematic Comparison of the American System with 30 Other Democracies

    By Steven L. Taylor, Matthew S. Shugart, Arend Lijphart, and Bernard Grofman

    It is often said that the United States has an exceptional democracy. To what degree is this claim empirically true? If it is true, in what ways is US democracy different and do those differences matter? What explanations exist for these differences?

    The study examines the choices made by the designers of the US government at the Philadelphia convention of 1787 and the institutional structures that evolved from those choices and compares them to 30 other democracies. The basic topics for comparison are as follows: constitutions, federalism, political parties, elections, interest groups, legislative power, executive power, judicial power, bureaucracies, and public policy.

    Each chapter starts with a discussion of the feasible option set available on each type of institutional choice and the choices made by the US founders as a means of introducing the concepts, as well as discussing how specific choices made in the US led to particular outcomes. This is done by looking at the discussions on these topics from the Federalist Papers and the debates from the Philadelphia Convention. This approach allows a means of explaining the concepts in a comparative fashion (e.g., federal v. unitary government, unicameralism v. bicameralism, etc.) before moving into the comparisons of the US system to our other 30 democracies, which make up the second half of each chapter. Each chapter contains an explicit list of specific differences between the US and the other democracies as well as comparative data in tabular and graphical formats. The current draft of our book has 64 tables, 16 figures, and 10 text boxes. All of the figures and tables contain comprehensive comparative data featuring all 31 cases (save in a handful of instances) or specific thematic subsets of the 31 cases (e.g., presidential systems or bicameral legislatures).

    The book is now under contract with Yale University Press.

    Comments are welcome (but act fast!).

    Propagation: Seeds & scions (5)


    5 ideas sprouting »

    1. No chapter on independent monitory agencies?

      Seed planted by Alan — 17 March 2013 @ 23:04

    2. Lovely book and quite a set of authors. Most Americans don’t grasp how idiosyncratic their country is; they still won’t as books like this don’t reach a wide audience, but maybe it’ll better equip a few to explain how weird we are.

      I really like the effective number of units measure for federations; it’s hand to have a way to put population disparities and the corresponding representative ones in perspective.

      The only thing that stood out to me is that John Dickinson’s plan for the constitution doesn’t appear in the second chapter. This is entirely reasonable as it’s very obscure and he never actually proposed it, only wrote it in his papers. I just have a certain affection for it because of how baroque it is. The lower house was to have 3-year terms with a third replaced annually and the upper 7-year terms with a seventh replaced annually. The executive was to have 3 members with 7-year terms, also staggered. It’s a hoot that only somebody who was briefly simultaneously President of both Delaware and Pennsylvania could have devised.

      Seed planted by Paludicola — 18 March 2013 @ 16:06

    3. And I thought India was the only federation that lets the same person be governor of two or more States at once…

      Seed planted by Tom Round — 21 March 2013 @ 04:15

    4. Tom: that was back in the years when Pennsylvania and Delaware had a state union not unlike the late Serbia and Montenegro… but that situation ended before 1787.

      Seed planted by JD — 21 March 2013 @ 09:18

    5. I’m reading through it a bit at a time right now and I just the chapter on elections. I’m rather disappointed that there was hardly any mention of any ranked preference methods other than AV, and even that — a footnote to an appendix — doesn’t name any of them. From reading the main text you’d think ranked choice simply was AV, as if no other way of counting had ever been devised. If you had intended to limit yourself to methods used in “real life”, you should have included Bucklin.

      Seed planted by Aaron Armitage — 28 March 2013 @ 11:12

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    FRUIT FEEDS
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    Recent comments.

  • Is MMP in Ireland’s future? (8)
    • Tom Round: I’m not unfamiliar with the attraction of MMP. I felt it myself when I first started studying electoral systems. It retains...
    • Wilf Day: Ireland’s Constitutional Convention is a very interesting model of an electoral reform process. It includes 66 randomly selected...
    • MSS: Yes, electoral-syste m change would require a constitutional amendment, which is why it is a topic of the Constitutional Convention. The...
    • Alan: I expect the sixth and last senate place to be decided by very small margins in a number of states. Voting below the line will have more than...
    • Tom Round: Sorry, I should clarify: A legal change to an explicit party list system would indeed require a referendum to amend the Constituti...
  • Do UK elections now allow fusion candidacies? (13)
    • Derek: I’d like to see the idea of equal preferences in a country like UK.
    • Tom Round: Chris @9: “but in not having an UKIP opponent to siphon votes from the right.” Good point. However, given voluntary voting...
    • MSS: UKIP did admit during the recent local election campaign that it did not fully vet its candidates, due to (it was claimed) resource...
    • Chris: UKIP’s candidates for Parliament and MEP do indeed seem to need National Executive Committee Approval before being placed on the...
    • Chris: I think the key thing in being a Conservative-UK IP candidate might not be in having both of their emblems, but in not having an UKIP...
    • MSS: Here is the text (see Jaffr’s link): After paragraph (2A) insert— “(2AA)If a candidate who is the subject of an authorisation by...
    • MSS: Let me call attention here to Jaffr. at comment #1, who notes the amendment to the ballot law was passed earlier in 2013. (This comment was...
  • Distortions of the US House: It’s not how the districts are drawn, but that there are (single-seat) districts (30)
    • Ed: This is another article where the writer attempted to draw non-partisan districts, using a set of criteria an independent commission could...
  • Does STV have anything to do with absence of “free votes” in Ireland? (16)
    • MSS: I was sort of hoping this thread would be about free votes and STV’s possible role in them, but whatever… Uruguay has primary...
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