Fr. 236.00

Parliamentary Committees in a Party-Centred Context - Looking Behind the Scenes

English · Hardback

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Description

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This book examines the working procedures of parliamentary party groups within specialised committees - the backstage but primary means for MPs to influence policy.
It explains which MPs specialise in particular policy areas, how they make policy choices in committees, and, subsequently, how these individual decisions are aggregated and 'unified' within and via parliamentary party groups. In doing so, the book expertly reveals the internal working procedures of parliaments and the role of individual MPs vis-á-vis the parliamentary party group leadership. Based on an analysis of more than 3,000 committee assignments and over 100 in-depth interviews with MPs, it shows that individual experts in committees have a central role and decision-making power which is more varied and decentralised from the leadership than commonly assumed. It demonstrates that most policy decisions are prepared bottom-up rather than dictated top-down and that parliamentary party groups are not strictly hierarchical organisations dominated by elites.
This book will be of key interest to scholars and students of legislative and parliamentary studies, representative democracy, comparative politics, and journalists and practitioners within parliaments.

List of contents

1. What this Book is About  2. A Review of Theories and Literature on Committees' Roles and Purposes  3. Theoretical Framework. Congressional Rationales in a PPG-Centred Context  4. Analysing Structural Features of Committee Systems  5. Analysing Criteria to Select Committee Members  6. Committee Workings. What Can Committee Members Do?  7. Conclusion. Specialised Committees in Parliaments with Strong Parliamentary Party Groups

About the author

Tim Alexander Mickler is Assistant Professor at the Institute of Political Science, Leiden University, the Netherlands.

Summary

This book examines the working procedures of parliamentary party groups within specialised committees - the backstage but primary means for MPs to influence policy.
It explains which MPs specialise in particular policy areas, how they make policy choices in committees, and, subsequently, how these individual decisions are aggregated and ‘unified’ within and via parliamentary party groups. In doing so, the book expertly reveals the internal working procedures of parliaments and the role of individual MPs vis-á-vis the parliamentary party group leadership. Based on an analysis of more than 3,000 committee assignments and over 100 in-depth interviews with MPs, it shows that individual experts in committees have a central role and decision-making power which is more varied and decentralised from the leadership than commonly assumed. It demonstrates that most policy decisions are prepared bottom-up rather than dictated top-down and that parliamentary party groups are not strictly hierarchical organisations dominated by elites.
This book will be of key interest to scholars and students of legislative and parliamentary studies, representative democracy, comparative politics, and journalists and practitioners within parliaments.

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