"Who Controls the Legislative Process? Party Cartels, Committee Gatekeepers, and Subcommittee Activity in the South Korean National Assembly" by Sunwoo Kwak, Eunmi Cho, and Sinjae Kang, contributing from @yonsei_u
https://t.co/6QecWPzIHv
"Do Women Legislators Legislate Differently Than Men on Gun-Related Policy? A Suggestive Yes" by Patrick Cunha Silva (@LoyolaChicago), @markarian_g (@LoyolaChicago), and Brady Mudge (@LoyolaChicago), is available to read at the link below:
https://t.co/A94Oxu04Tz
"Ministries That We Want: Legislative Behavior and Signaling of Portfolio Salience" by Fernando Meireles (@uerj_iesp), Magna Inรกcio (@ufmg), and Rosiene Guerra (@ufmg)
https://t.co/1zjNETWsFw
๐ Recent from Legislative Studies Quarterly:
Explore three new articles published in the last few weeks covering the latest research in legislative politics
"Control or Representation? Government-Opposition Dynamics and the Use of Geographic Parliamentary Questions" by @MortenHarmening (@UniHannover) is available to read at the link below:
https://t.co/lqiS7YwqmD
Happy Sunday โ๏ธ
New in Legislative Studies Quarterly: "Divergent Position Taking Under Uncertainty With an Application to Chile's 2021โ2022 Constituent Convention" by Jorge Fabrega (@UDD_cl@Princeton) and John Londregan (@UDD_cl@Princeton)
๐
https://t.co/h8Plm6f7wO
"Gender, Party Status, and Lawmaking in the American States: A Reassessment of Legislative Effectiveness" by Abby Child (@BYU), Laura Pacheco (@BYU), and @mbarber83 (@BYU) is available to read at the link below:
https://t.co/nSwVUhf3V1
Read it now... "Partisan and Ideological Bias Among the Attentive Public: Evidence From Witness Slips in the Illinois General Assembly" by @MichaelRKistner (@UHPoliticalSci) and Michael Pomirchy (@Stanford)
https://t.co/MMYakqpudB
"A Rich Woman's World? Wealth and Gendered Paths to Office" by Rachel Bernhard (@NuffieldCollege),ย @aeggers (@UChicago), and Marko Klaลกnja (@Georgetown) is available to read now at the link below:
https://t.co/JZbQL2wUeZ
New and open access ๐๐
"Cover Bills" by Nicolas Florez (@UMich) and Christian Fong (@UMich) is available to read at the link below:
https://t.co/aFOIJ7tPom
๐ New in Legislative Studies Quarterly:
"Electoral Reform and Legislative Behavior: Evidence From Denmark's Transition to Proportional Representation" by @MartinEjnar (@Bruneluni)
Read it now at the link below:
https://t.co/fz0MKHcCHc
"Who Shows Up? Legislative Attendance by Electoral Seat Type in Bangladesh and Pakistan" by Dipak Kumar Biswas (@WestVirginiaU) andย @erikherron (@WestVirginiaU)
As we wrap up 2025, weโre taking one last look at the scholarship that closed out the year in Legislative Studies Quarterly
Here are 7 December articles worth revisiting before we head into 2026 ๐งต