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History of American Legislatures, 1619-2024 [Kõva köide]

  • Formaat: Hardback, 408 pages, paksus: 43 mm, kaal: 739 g, 29 tables, 4 figures
  • Sari: Studies in Constitutional Democracy
  • Ilmumisaeg: 29-May-2026
  • Kirjastus: University of Missouri Press
  • ISBN-10: 0826223508
  • ISBN-13: 9780826223500
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  • Formaat: Hardback, 408 pages, paksus: 43 mm, kaal: 739 g, 29 tables, 4 figures
  • Sari: Studies in Constitutional Democracy
  • Ilmumisaeg: 29-May-2026
  • Kirjastus: University of Missouri Press
  • ISBN-10: 0826223508
  • ISBN-13: 9780826223500
Teised raamatud teemal:
What might members of the first Virginia assembly think if they could visit the contemporary Virginia House of Delegates? The air-conditioned chamber would stun them, and they would surely be astonished by the diversity of the current membership. But would the legislative process itself seem odd? 

The answer is no, as they would find the way the modern legislature goes about its work surprisingly familiar. The use of committees would not come as a shock because the lawmakers in 1619 created two of them on the first day that their assembly met. Similarly, they would be comfortable with the basic procedures used to structure decision making because current legislators still rely on parliamentary rules such as addressing remarks to the presiding officer and requiring bills to be read three times.

This thought experiment highlights that, while clear differences emerged among American legislatures over four centuries, not everything changed. In his latest work, Peverill Squire demonstrates that we can trace an (almost) uninterrupted path from that first assembly in Virginia in 1619 to the contemporary Virginia General Assembly, and to the U.S. Congress and the other forty-nine state legislatures. 
 
Peverill Squire presents a concise yet comprehensive history of American legislatures covering their more than four-hundred-year existence. The text is broad and accessible, and he does not examine any one type of legislature in isolation because colonial, national, state, and territorial bodies all contributed to the developmental process. Accordingly, the book’s chapters examine discrete legislative topics rather than historical eras. 

Arvustused

With this book, Squire pulls off a near-impossible feat.  In brief, broad strokes, he describes the central features of the American state, territorial, and national legislatures over more than 400 years of history.  The book is original, remarkably comprehensive, and encyclopedic in its level of detail.  Anyone interested in learning about the rich variety of American legislative institutions will find Squires latest book an invaluable starting point and indispensable reference.Gerald Gamm, University of Rochester, coauthor of Steering the Senate: The Emergence of Party Organization and Leadership, 17892024 Squire has written an incredibly comprehensive and well-researched history of state legislatures. It's a joy to read and full of fascinating details a definitive work that will be referred to by political scientists and historians for decades to come.Matthew Green, The Catholic University of America, coauthor of Newt Gingrich: The Rise and Fall of a Party Entrepreneur  A History of American Legislatures, 16192024, is a comprehensive guide to the evolution of the modern state legislature which increasingly plays a central role in citizens' lives.  Peverill Squire, the nation's leading scholar of state legislatures, has written a highly engaging book that presents historical facts, figures, and lively quotes from key political figures across time. The information in this book is presented efficiently with easy access to valuable tables that summarize historical trends across all 50 states.  Among the topics this book covers are the debates over where to locate a state capital, how many legislators should be in the State House and Senate, terms of office, salaries, districting, staffing, leadership, committees, legislative process, and political party control.  For students, scholars, teachers, and observers of politics, A History of American Legislatures is an essential part of your toolkit.Wendy Schiller, Brown University, author of Inequality Across State Lines: How Policymakers Have Failed Domestic Violence Victims in the United States Well-established as the most prominent scholar of state legislatures, Squire has outdone himself here. He combines specific and fascinating institutional details with fresh, wide-ranging perspectives; he highlights the similarities and the differences across state legislatures; and he draws attention to both the ways in which these bodies have remained the same and the ways in which they have evolved. Filled with fresh insights in every chapter, this magisterial book will be of interest to all scholars of legislatures, state politics, and political institutions more generally. Charles Shipan, University of Michigan, coauthor of Why Bad Policies Spread (and Good Ones Dont) This book is a necessity for scholars of legislative politics in the United States. No other book provides such a comprehensive and statistical history of American legislatures and how they developed over time. Peverill Squire provides a history of legislatures in terms of various traits, including numbers of chambers, timing of elections, locations of capitols, and terms of office, among many others. The book is organized by topic. For any scholar of legislative politics, particularly anyone seeking to test theories of politics using historical data, Squire's book is unmatched in value. James Strickland, Florida State University  Peverill Squire has long been a major authority on American state legislatures, but in my view A History of American Legislatures, 1619-2024 is his most important contribution to this field. The book is informative, enlightening, and entertaining. Many key features of legislatures, most notably committee systems and voting procedures, are the product of structural imperatives. But as Squire shows here, other features arise from historical happenstance. Such is the case of bicameralisman institutional innovation crafted by legislators in colonial Massachusetts, in the course of assessing liability for damages caused by a loose destructive pig. For students of American political history, this book is a must read. D. Roderick Kiewiet, California Institute of Technology, coauthor of The Logic of Delegation: Congressional Parties and the Appropriations Process

Peverill Squire holds the Hicks and Martha Griffiths Chair in American Political Institutions at the Truman School of Government and Public Affairs at the University of Missouri at Columbia. Professor Squire specializes in American politics and legislative studies and is the author of 5 books, most recently Reforming Legislatures: American Voters and State Ballot Measures, 1792-2020 and The Right of Instruction and Representation in American Legislatures, 1778 to 1900.