PART V: Constitutional Political Economy
A. On the Architecture of Governance
1. How Should Votes be Cast and Counted?
Nicolaus Tideman
2. Voters and representatives: How should representatives be
selected?
Thomas Braendle and Alois Stutzer
3. Divided Government: the king and the council
George Tridimas
4. Bicameralism
Cecilia Testa
5. Federalism
Jaroslaw Kantorowicz
6. Executive Veto Power and Constitutional Design
Nicholas R. Miller
7. Politics and the Legal System
Lee Epstein, Andrew D. Martin, Kevin Quinn & Jeffrey A. Segal
8. Constitutional Review
Nuno Garoupa
9. Institutions for Amending Constitutions
Cristina Bucur and Bjørn Erik Rasch
10. Constitutional Transition
Zachary Elkins
11. Electoral systems in the making
Daniel Bochsler
12. Choosing Voting Rules in the European Union
B?la Plechanovová, Madeleine O. Hosli and Anatolij Plechanov
B. The Theory of Dictatorship
13. Leviathan, Taxation, and Public Goods
Martin C. McGuire
14. Fiscal Powers Revisited: The Leviathan Model after 40 Years
Geoffrey Brennan and Hartmut Kliemt
15. Are There Types of Dictatorship?
Ronald Wintrobe
16. Are there really dictatorships? The Selectorate and
authoritarian governance
Alejandro Quiroz Flores
17. The coup: competition for office in authoritarian regimes
Toke Aidt and Gabriel Leon
18. The Logic of Revolutions: Rational Choice Perspectives
Timur Kuran and Diego Romero
C. On the Effects of the Institutions of Governance
19. Direct Democracy and Public Policy
John G. Matsusaka
20. Policy differences among parliamentary and presidential
systems
Sebastian M. Saiegh
21. The Significance of Political Parties
Michael Munger
22. The least dangerous branch? Public choice, constitutional
courts, and democratic governance
Georg Vanberg
23. Challenges in Estimating the Effects of Constitutional Design
on Public Policy
Stefan Voigt and Jerg Gutmann
PART VI: APPLICATIONS, EXTENSIONS, AND METHODOLOGICAL ISSUES
A. The Politics of Public Policy
24. The Political Economy of Taxation: Power, Structure,
Redistribution
Stanley L. Winer
25. The politics of central bank independence
Jakob de Haan and Sylvester C.W. Eijffinger
26. The Political Economy of Redistribution Policy
Luna Bellani and Heinrich Ursprung
27. Political Participation and the welfare
Rainald Borck
28. Institutions for Solving Commons Problems: Lessons and
Implications for Institutional Design
Paul Dragos Aligica and Michael E. Cox
29. Rational Ignorance and Public Choice
Ilya Somin
30. Is Government Growth Inevitable?
Randall G. Holcombe
B. International Public Choice
31. The Political Economy of International Organizations
Axel Dreher and Valentin F. Lang
32. The Politics of International Trade
Wilfred J. Ethier and Arye L. Hillman
33. Politics, Direct Investment, Public Debt Markets and the Shadow
Economy: What do we (not) know?
Friedrich Schneider
34. The Politics of International Aid
Hristos Doucouliagos
35. Is democracy exportable?
Pierre Salmon
C. Public Choice and History
36. Ancient Greece: Democracy and Autocracy
Robert K. Fleck and F. Andrew Hanssen
37. Christian History and Public Choice
Mario Ferrero
38. Voting at the U.S. Constitutional Convention
Keith L. Dougherty
39. Precursors to public choice
Iain McLean
D. Measurement and other Methodological Issues
40. Estimates of the Spatial Voting Model
Christopher Hare and Keith T. Poole
41. The Dimensionality of Parliamentary Voting
Keith T. Poole
42. Voting and Popularity
Gebhard Kirchgässner
43. Detection of election fraud
Susumu Shikano and Verena Mack
44. Experimental Public Choice: Elections
Aaron Kamm and Arthur Schram
45. Experimental Evidence on Expressive Voting
Jean-Robert Tyran and Alexander K. Wagner
Roger D. Congleton is the BB&T Professor of Economics at West
Virginia University. He is coeditor of the journal, Constitutional
Political Economy , and has publishing well over a hundred fifty
articles on public choice related topics in journals and academic
books.
Professor Congleton also served as president of the Public Choice
Society from March 2018 through March 2020.
Bernard Grofman is the Jack W. Peltason Chair of Democracy Studies
and Professor of Political Science, University of California,
Irvine.
Stefan Voigt is professor of Law & Economics at the University of
Hamburg in Germany. He is best known for his research in
constitutional political economy. Together with Roger Congleton, he
is editor of the journal, Constitutional Political Economy.
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