1980
DOI: 10.2307/2110957
|View full text |Cite
|
Sign up to set email alerts
|

Allocating Coalition Payoffs by Conventional Norm: An Assessment of the Evidence from Cabinet Coalition Situations

Help me understand this report

Search citation statements

Order By: Relevance

Paper Sections

Select...
1
1
1

Citation Types

3
61
0
7

Year Published

2005
2005
2015
2015

Publication Types

Select...
5
3

Relationship

0
8

Authors

Journals

citations
Cited by 89 publications
(71 citation statements)
references
References 7 publications
3
61
0
7
Order By: Relevance
“…Empirical studies of GL's performance typically include as a regressor the share of ministries in the coalition government controlled by each party (Browne and Franklin, 1973;Browne and Frendreis, 1980;Schofield and Laver, 1985;Laver and Schofield, 1990;and Warwick and Druckman, 2001). 32 The three-player treatments considered here, for which the minimum integer representation is (1, 1, 1), allow us to nest the predictions of DB and GL in a simple specification.…”
Section: Relationship Of Results To Field Datamentioning
confidence: 99%
See 1 more Smart Citation
“…Empirical studies of GL's performance typically include as a regressor the share of ministries in the coalition government controlled by each party (Browne and Franklin, 1973;Browne and Frendreis, 1980;Schofield and Laver, 1985;Laver and Schofield, 1990;and Warwick and Druckman, 2001). 32 The three-player treatments considered here, for which the minimum integer representation is (1, 1, 1), allow us to nest the predictions of DB and GL in a simple specification.…”
Section: Relationship Of Results To Field Datamentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Gamson's Law (Gamson, 1961) is a popular empirical model of the legislative bargaining process. Gamson's Law is not based on any explicit game theoretic formulation of the legislative bargaining process, but rather owes its importance in the literature to the strong empirical regularity reporting proportionality between cabinet posts and votes contributed to the ruling coalition in parliamentary democracies (Browne and Franklin, 1973;Browne and Frendreis, 1980;Druckman, 2001, 2003). One of the great appeals of Gamson's Law is its intuitive nature and the parsimony it offers, as it is independent of the game form underlying the legislative bargaining process.…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…This is not true empirically, a finding first published over 40 years ago. 6 Nonetheless, GL itself has proved extraordinarily robust to replication, even when different cabinet portfolios are assigned very 4 (Bassi 2013;Carroll and Cox 2007a;Laver et al 2011;Warwick and Druckman 2006;Falcó-Gimeno and Indridason 2013) 5 Browne and Franklin 1973;Browne and Frendreis 1980;Fréchette et al 2005b;Gamson 1961;Laver et al 2011;Schofield and Laver 1985;Warwick and Druckman 2006;Snyder et al 2005) different empirical weights. 7 On the other side of the paradox we find canonical alternating offers models of legislative bargaining, with an intellectual pedigree traceable to Rubinstein (1982), adapted to legislative bargaining by Baron and Ferejohn (1989 .…”
Section: The Paradoxmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The second proposition is stated ex post, knowing the identity of the formateur. The propositions are therefore not contradictory because they apply in 7 Browne and Franklin 1973;Browne and Frendreis 1980;Fréchette et al 2005b;Gamson 1961;Laver et al 2011;Schofield and Laver 1985;Warwick and Druckman 2006;Snyder et al 2005) 8 Snyder et al 2005) 9 (Snyder et al 2005: 982) 10 (Snyder et al 2005: 992) different settings, but this highlights a critical distinction between ex ante and ex post models of cabinet portfolio distribution. The paradox is therefore both simple and striking.…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…This strong empirical regularity contradicts canonical bargaining models in predicting no formateur advantage. GL has been tested and retested many times and is remarkably robust (Browne and Franklin 1973;Browne and Frendreis 1980;Gamson 1961;Laver and Schofield 1998;Druckman 2001, 2006). This generates what Warwick and Druckman (2006) call the "portfolio allocation paradox".…”
Section: Extension Of Bargaining Models To N-party Legislatures With mentioning
confidence: 99%