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BETH A. ROSENSON
University of Florida
Against Their Apparent Self-Interest:
The Authorization of Independent State
Legislative Ethics Commissions, 1973-96
Why
do state legislators enact policies that conflict with their immediate
self-interest? I address this question by assessing the impact of traditional
and non-traditional policy determinants on ethics policy adoption. Specifically,
I use event history analysis to identify the factors that explain the
authorization of independent state legislative ethics commissions from
1973 to 1996. I find that the determinants of ethics policy are substantially,
but not completely, different from those of other policies, with ethics
policy fitting into an agenda-setting model better than many other policies.
Scandals and the actions of other states played a prominent role in setting
the agenda and facilitating the authorization of ethics commissions. The
agenda-setting process transforms the immediate self-interest of legislators
on this issue from one of concern about their own economic well being
to one of concern about re-election. In addition, political culture, institutional
power arrangements, legislative compensation, and party competition had
small but discernible effects on the likelihood of a state establishing
a legislative ethics commission.
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