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SUMMARY:Takaharu Saito (Nagoya University of Commerce and Business)\, "Does Divided Government Control Unilateral Policymaking? Evidence from Chair Elections"
DESCRIPTION:U.S. ET: August 24 (Thursday)\, 8 – 9 PM \nJST: August 25 (Friday)\, 9 – 10 AM \nZoom Registration: Link. \nPaper is available here. \nAuthor: Takaharu Saito (Nagoya University of Commerce and Business) \nAbstract: \nUnilateral action remains a crucial aspect of presidential policy formulation\, yet empirical consensus on the role of executive-legislative relations remains elusive. In this research\, we applied a Regression Discontinuity (RD) design to scrutinize 4\,898 chairperson elections across 790 municipal governments in Japan\, revealing no substantial influence of executive-legislative dynamics on unilateral action. Consequently\, this study underscores the possibility that the utility of established theories might be contextually confined to specific temporal and geographical realms. \nPresenter: Takaharu Saito (Nagoya University of Commerce and Business) \nDiscussants: Alex Bolton (Emory University) and Charles McClean (Yale University) \nChair: Phillip Lipscy (University of Toronto)
URL:https://jposs.org/event/takaharu-saito-nagoya-university-of-commerce-and-business-does-divided-government-control-unilateral-policymaking-evidence-from-chair-elections/
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