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El. knyga: The Role of Governments in Legislative Agenda Setting

Edited by (University of Michigan, USA), Edited by (University of Oslo, Norway)
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Setting the agenda for parliament is the most significant institutional weapon for governments to shape policy outcomes, because governments with significant agenda setting powers, like France or the UK, are able to produce the outcomes they prefer, while governments that lack agenda setting powers, such as the Netherlands and Italy in the beginning of the period examined, see their projects significantly altered by their Parliaments.

With a strong comparative framework, this coherent volume examines fourteen countries and provides a detailed investigation into the mechanisms by which governments in different countries determine the agendas of their corresponding parliaments. It explores the three different ways that governments can shape legislative outcomes: institutional, partisan and positional, to make an important contribution to legislative politics.

It will be of interest to students and scholars of comparative politics, legislative studies/parliamentary research, governments/coalition politics, political economy, and policy studies.
1. Governments and Legislative Agenda Setting: An Introduction George
Tsebelis and Bjųrn Erik Rasch
2. Germany: Limited Government Agenda Control
and Strong Minority Rights Christoph Hönnige and Ulrich Sieberer
3. France:
Systematic Institutional Advantage of Government Sylvain Brouard
4. Italy:
Government Alternation and Legislative Agenda Setting Francesco Zucchini
5.
United Kingdom: Extreme Dominance by the Executive... Most of the Time Mads
Qvortrup
6. Hungary: Changing Government AdvantagesChallenging a Dominant
Executive Gabriella Ilonszki and Krisztina Jįger
7. Netherlands: Legislative
Agenda Setting and the Politics of Strategic Lock-Ins Arco Timmermans
8.
Switzerland: Agenda-Setting Power of Government in a Separation-of-Powers
Framework Daniel Schwarz, André Bächtiger and Georg Lutz
9. Greece:
Government as the Dominant Player Aris Alexopoulos 10 Spain: Majoritarian
Choices, Disciplined Party Government and Compliant Legislature Natalia
Ajenjo and Ignatio Molina
11. Portugal: Active and Influential Parliament
Eugenia da Conceiēćo-Heldt
12. Russia: The Executive in a Leading Role Iulia
Shevchenko and Grigorii Golosov
13. Agenda Control and Veto Rights to
Opposition Parties Robert Klemmensen
14. Norway: Institutionally Weak
Governments and Parliamentary Voting on Bills Bjųrn Erik Rasch
15. Japan:
Decades of Partisan Advantages Impending Cabinets Agenda Setting Power Silke
Riemann 16.Conclusion Bjųrn Erik Rasch and George Tsebelis
George Tsebelis is Anatol Rapoport Collegiate Professor, Department of Political Science, University of Michigan. He is the author of numerous articles on political institutions. His articles have appeared in professional Journals as American Political Science Review, British Journal of Political Science, Rationality and Society and Journal of Theoretical Politics. He is the author of "Nested Games: Rational Choice in Comparative Politics" (University of California Press, 1990), Bicameralism (with Jeanette Money; Cambridge University Press, 1997), and Veto Players (Princeton University Press, 2002).



Bjųrn Erik Rasch, Professor, Department of Political Science, University of Oslo. He has written numerous articles on parliaments, and has published nine books (in Norwegian). The most recent one studies parliamentary government and constitutional reforms (Kampen om regjeringsmakten, Fagbokforlaget 2004). His English language articles have appeared journals as Legislative Studies Quarterly, Public Choice, European Journal of Political Economy and Scandinavian Political Studies. Rasch was member of a Constitutional Commission appointed by the Norwegian parliament in late 2003 to review and modernize the Court of Impeachment. He also was member of a committee who designed a new electoral system for the Sami Parliament in Northern Norway. From 2005 Rasch has headed and coordinated the study programs in political science at the University of Oslo.