Torn and Frayed: Congressional Norms and Party Switching in an Era of Reform
By (Author) Judd Choate
Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
Praeger Publishers Inc
30th October 2003
United States
General
Non Fiction
328.730769
Hardback
176
Members come and go, reforms are attempted and abandoned, but congressional norms of seniority, specialization, and reciprocity adapt, survive, and continue to influence the course of American government. In the first major look at congressional normative behavior in 25 years, Choate argues these resilient folkways survive because members value the institutional stability and continuity they provide. Working from extensive on-the-record interviews with past and present House members, Choate's work is the first to study the unsettling effects on norms brought on by party switching.
[T]his is a well-constructed study that properly centers its analysis on the attitudes of House members. In a field that sometimes tends to view the House primarily through highly stylized theoretical lenses, Choate's calls for increasingly tapping members as a resource and a greater behavioral focus are well taken....[t]his book will undoubtedly lead its readers to reconsider the importance of congressional norms, For this alone, it is well worth reading.-Political Science Quarterly
Choate's book is a careful treatise that sticks close to the literature describing the establishment of norms of behavior for members of Congress over the 19th and 20th centuries, and the partial unraveling of these norms in the harsh partisan climate of the last three decades....Recommended. Undergraduates and above.-Choice
"This is a well-constructed study that properly centers its analysis on the attitudes of House members. In a field that sometimes tends to view the House primarily through highly stylized theoretical lenses, Choate's calls for increasingly tapping members as a resource and a greater behavioral focus are well taken....this book will undoubtedly lead its readers to reconsider the importance of congressional norms, For this alone, it is well worth reading."-Political Science Quarterly
"Choate's book is a careful treatise that sticks close to the literature describing the establishment of norms of behavior for members of Congress over the 19th and 20th centuries, and the partial unraveling of these norms in the harsh partisan climate of the last three decades....Recommended. Undergraduates and above."-Choice
"[T]his is a well-constructed study that properly centers its analysis on the attitudes of House members. In a field that sometimes tends to view the House primarily through highly stylized theoretical lenses, Choate's calls for increasingly tapping members as a resource and a greater behavioral focus are well taken....[t]his book will undoubtedly lead its readers to reconsider the importance of congressional norms, For this alone, it is well worth reading."-Political Science Quarterly
JUDD CHOATE a former assistant professor of political science at the University of Nebraska and faculty fellow at the University of Nebraska Public Policy Center. From 2000 to 2002, he served as director of the Nebraska Minority and Justice Task Force, researching racial and ethnic bias in the Nebraska court system.