Party Personnel Strategies

Party Personnel Strategies

  • Matthew Soberg Shugart
  • Matthew E. Bergman
  • Cory L. Struthers
  • Ellis S. Krauss
  • Robert Pekkanen
Publisher:Oxford University PressISBN 13: 9780192897053ISBN 10: 0192897055

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Party Personnel Strategies is written by Matthew Soberg Shugart and published by Oxford University Press. It's available with International Standard Book Number or ISBN identification 0192897055 (ISBN 10) and 9780192897053 (ISBN 13).

Key party goals serve to advance a policy brand and maximize seats in the legislature. This book offers a theory of how political parties assign their elected members -- their "personnel" -- to specialized legislative committees to serve collective organizational goals, here known as "party personnel strategies". Individual party members vary in their personal attributes, such as prior occupation, gender, and local experience. Parties seek to harness the attributes of their members by assigning them to committees where their expertise is relevant, and where they may enhance the party's policy brand. However, under some electoral systems, parties may need to trade-off the harnessing of expertise against the pursuit of seats, instead matching legislators according to electoral situation (e.g. marginality of seat) or characteristics of their constituency (e.g. population density). This book offers an analysis of the extent to which parties trade these goals by matching the attributes of their personnel and their electoral needs to the functions of the available committee seats. The analysis is based on a dataset of around six thousand legislators across thirty-eight elections in six established parliamentary democracies with diverse electoral systems.