2005
DOI: 10.2139/ssrn.1815888
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Political Institutions, Policymaking Processes, and Policy Outcomes in Mexico

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Cited by 8 publications
(11 citation statements)
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“…Los datos señalan que los grupos que han dominado la representación son los empresariales y los sindicales. Un hallazgo que confirma a otros estudios que enfatizan la importancia de ambas organizaciones en la toma de decisiones (Lehoucq et al, 2005;Banco Mundial, 2007;Elizondo, 2009Elizondo, , 2010.…”
Section: Procedencia De Los Legisladoresunclassified
See 1 more Smart Citation
“…Los datos señalan que los grupos que han dominado la representación son los empresariales y los sindicales. Un hallazgo que confirma a otros estudios que enfatizan la importancia de ambas organizaciones en la toma de decisiones (Lehoucq et al, 2005;Banco Mundial, 2007;Elizondo, 2009Elizondo, , 2010.…”
Section: Procedencia De Los Legisladoresunclassified
“…Un conjunto de investigaciones sostiene que las presiones ejercidas por intereses específicos afectan el proceso legislativo. Desde la economía política afirman que los grupos de interés obstaculizan reformas estructurales y defienden el statu quo del cual se benefician 3 (Lehoucq et al, 2005;Banco Mundial, 2007;Guerrero et al, 2009;Elizondo, 2009Elizondo, , 2010. Otros trabajos describen el cabildeo e identifican casos de éxito y fracaso de los grupos para influir en las decisiones legislativas (Arrieta, 2010;Arrieta & González, 2007), pero se concentran en casos específicos de reformas y son sensibles a un problema frecuente en el estudio de los grupos de interés: el sesgo de selección.…”
unclassified
“…Elected officials are no longer unresponsive to the interests of territorially based voters. Mexican legislators still depend upon national party executive committees for campaign financing and career advancement, but legislators and parties as a whole have become attentive to territorially based constituents (Cantú and Desposato, 2012;Langston, 2010;Lehoucq et al, 2005). The interests and preferences of Mexico's governors can also strongly influence legislative conduct and policymaking (Langston, 2010;Rosas and Langston, 2011).…”
Section: The Role Of Subnational Economic Interestsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Gone are the days when elected officials ignore the interests of territorially based voters. Although Mexican legislators still depend on their national party for campaign financing and career advancement, legislators increasingly seek to service territorially based constituents (Lehoucq, Negretto, Aparicio, Nacif, and Betton 2005). Clear evidence exists that subnational interests now strongly influence legislators’ careers (Hernández‐Rodríguez 2003; Langston 2006).…”
Section: Trade Policy and Institutional Change In Mexicomentioning
confidence: 99%