Parliaments and Government Formation
Unpacking Investiture Rules
Edited by Bjørn Erik Rasch, Shane Martin, and José Antonio Cheibub
Author Information
Edited by Bjørn Erik Rasch, Professor of Political Science, University of Oslo, Shane Martin, Reader in Comparative Politics, University of Leicester, and José Antonio Cheibub, Boeschenstein Professor of Political Economy and Public Policy and Professor of Political Science, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign
Bjørn Erik Rasch is Professor of Political Science and Deputy Dean at the Faculty of Social Sciences, University of Oslo. His research is currently focused on legislative organization, parliamentarism, and constitutional amendment procedures. Rasch has written or edited eleven books, of which The Role of Governments in Legislative Agenda Setting (co-edited with George Tsebelis, 2011) is the latest one. He has published numerous articles in books and journals such as Public Choice , Legislative Studies Quarterly, Journal of Legislative Studies, and European Journal of Political Economy. Rasch was member of a Constitutional Commission appointed by the Norwegian Parliament in 2003 to review and modernize the Court of Impeachment and a committee who designed a new electoral system for the Sami Parliament in Northern Norway. Rasch is a member of The Norwegian Academy of Science and Letters.
Shane Martin is Reader in Comparative Politics at the University of Leicester. His research focuses on how electoral incentives shape representatives' preferences, the internal structures of legislatures, and executive oversight. Recent research by Martin has appeared in the British Journal of Political Science, Comparative Political Studies, Legislative Studies Quarterly, The Journal of Legislative Studies, Political Studies, West European Politics, and Irish Political Studies. He is co-editor (with Kaare Strøm and Thomas Saalfeld) of The Oxford Handbook of Legislative Studies (2014). He was founding Co-Convenor of the ECPR Standing Group on Parliaments and was founding Co-Director of the European Summer School on Parliaments.
José Antonio Cheibub is Boeschenstein Professor of Political Economy and Public Policy and Professor of Political Science at the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign. He is also Faculty Associate at the Cline Center for Democracy at the University of Illinois. His research and teaching interests are in democratization, the emergence and effects of specific democratic institutions, and political economy. He is the author of Presidentialism, Parliamentarism, and Democracy (Cambridge University Press 2007), the co-editor of the Democracy Sourcebook (MIT Press, 2003) and the co-author of Democracy and Development: Political Institutions and Well-Being in the World, 1950-1990 (Cambridge University Press, 2000). He has published in several edited volumes and in journals such as American Political Science Review, World Politics, British Journal of Political Science, Comparative Political Studies, and Politics and Society.
Contributors:
Natalia Ajenjo,University of Salamanca.
Audrey André, Vrije Universiteit Brussel.
José Antonio Cheibub, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign.
Cristina Chiva, University of Salford.
Sam Depauw, Vrije Universiteit Brussel.
Kris Deschouwer, Vrije Universiteit Brussel.
Jorge M. Fernandes,University of Bamberg.
Steffen Ganghof, University of Potsdam.
Péter Horváth, Hungarian Academy of Sciences.
Alexandra Kelso, University of Southampton.
Jelle Koedam, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill.
André Krouwel, VU University Amsterdam.
Cristina Leston-Bandeira, University of Hull.
Shane Martin, University of Leicester.
Iris Nguyên-Duy, University of Oslo.
Csaba Nikolenyi, Concordia University, Montreal.
Bjørn Erik Rasch, University of Oslo.
Federico Russo, University of Siena.
Ulrich Sieberer, University of Konstanz.
Christian Stecker, Mannheim Centre for European Social Research.
Fabio Sozzi, University of Genova.
Helena Wockelberg, Uppsala University.
Robert Zbíral, University in Olomouc.
Radoslaw Zubek, University of Oxford.