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Patterns of Lawmaking: The Entangled Political Economy of Crises

Doctoral Dissertation in Political Economy
Dissertation
Reference
Laer, Wolf von (2017). Patterns of Lawmaking: The Entangled Political Economy of Crises. Doctoral Dissertation. Department of Political Economy, King's Collage, London.

Author
Wolf von Laer

In this dissertation, I present a unique pattern of lawmaking during crisis: laws become enacted quicker while at the same time gaining length. The data this pattern is based on come from the study of 11,584 laws passed by the US Congress over more than four decades.

The second part of the dissertation presents theoretical explanations for this pattern of lawmaking during crisis. For this I rely on an entangled political economy framework. This framework allows me to go beyond most narrow rational-choice theories and study the complex web of exchange relationships that makes up the lawmaking process. I study four groups that enter into this process: voters, legislators, interest groups, and bureaucrats. I argue that voters influence legislators not only by voting but also by generating pressure during crisis. Legislators react to citizens’ demands and want to signal to the electorate that they are addressing the crisis. They create what I call “Christmas tree laws”: laws that contain many policy proposals while serving the interests of legislators’ constituencies and themselves. Interest groups are to a large extent only reactive forces during this process since they cannot keep up with the speed and extensiveness of lawmaking. Certain coalitions of interest groups are able to secure rents, but that does not apply to interest groups in general. Lastly, I study bureaucrats and find that they are crucial nodes in the political decision-making structure because they design, interpret, and implement laws. Both bureaucrats and lawmakers have an incentive to delegate lawmaking to bureaucracies, which enables certain powerful individuals within bureaucracies to use formal and informal relationships to attain their personal or policy objectives.