2010
DOI: 10.1111/j.1540-6237.2010.00748.x
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Descriptive Representation and Latino Interest Bill Sponsorship in Congress*

Abstract: Objective. This article examines dynamics related to the sponsorship of Latino interest bills in Congress. I focus particularly on the influence of Latino representatives. Methods. I employ an original data set that includes all bills sponsored during the 109th Congress (2005)(2006) and use negative binomial and standard OLS regression techniques to test hypotheses that Latino representatives are more active sponsors of Latino interest bills than non-Latino representatives.Results. Findings demonstrate that bo… Show more

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Cited by 29 publications
(22 citation statements)
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“…Research examines whether descriptive representation affects responsiveness to minority interests in numerous behaviors, including roll call voting (Hero and Tolbert, ; Kerr and Miller, ; Canon, ; Tate, ; Knoll, ), bill sponsorship and co‐sponsorship (Canon, ; Bratton, ; Wilson, ), communication patterns (Canon, ; Wilson, ), committee participation (Gamble, ; Minta, ), district activities (Swain, ; Canon, ; Fenno, ), and other behaviors. Limited controversy withstanding, mostly in research on Latino representation, the consensus emerging from this literature is that descriptive representation enhances support for the interests of minority groups.…”
Section: Descriptive Representatives and The Substantive Representatimentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Research examines whether descriptive representation affects responsiveness to minority interests in numerous behaviors, including roll call voting (Hero and Tolbert, ; Kerr and Miller, ; Canon, ; Tate, ; Knoll, ), bill sponsorship and co‐sponsorship (Canon, ; Bratton, ; Wilson, ), communication patterns (Canon, ; Wilson, ), committee participation (Gamble, ; Minta, ), district activities (Swain, ; Canon, ; Fenno, ), and other behaviors. Limited controversy withstanding, mostly in research on Latino representation, the consensus emerging from this literature is that descriptive representation enhances support for the interests of minority groups.…”
Section: Descriptive Representatives and The Substantive Representatimentioning
confidence: 99%
“…In his research on race and the representational behavior in the US House of Representatives, Canon (1999) finds that African-American legislators from black majority districts were more likely than white legislators to introduce black interest bills. Additionally, Wilson's (2010) study of the 109th US Congress (2005)(2006) shows that Latino representatives were more likely to promote Latino interests in Congress, as Latino representatives more actively sponsored Latino interest bills than non-Latino representatives.…”
Section: Different Representational Behavior Between Racial Minority mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Bill sponsorship, specifically, is an active outlet of legislative behavior open to all legislators providing the opportunity to introduce a bill on any topic during the course of a single legislative session (Wawro 2001). While bill sponsorship is valuable to address the responsiveness of legislators to their constituents' preferences, past approaches analyzing bill sponsorship have often focused on agenda setting (Schiller 1995;Burstein, Bauldry, and Froese 2005;Rocca and Gordon 2010;Woon 2008), or on sub-group behavior in the legislative process (Barnello and Bratton 2007;Rocca and Sanchez 2008;Whitby 2002;Wilson 2010). And at the state level, Gamm and Kousser (2010) leveraged bill sponsorship to explore variance in district homogeneity as it relates to the targeted versus broad nature of bills.…”
Section: Bill Sponsorship As Issue-specific Responsivenessmentioning
confidence: 99%