Latin America Seminar
(Jointly supported by: Latin American Economy Research Group /
GSICS Latin American Political Science Workshop)

Date&Time Friday, June 15, 2012, 3:00pm-
Place Simulation Room at Graduate School of International Cooperation Studies (Building No. 5, 6th Floor)
Intended Audience Faculty, Graduate Students, and People with Equivalent Knowledge
Language English
Note Copies of the paper are available at Office of Promoting Research Collaboration.

3:00pm-

Speaker Taeko HIROI
Affiliation Depeartment of Political Science, University of Texas at El Paso
Topic Dimensions of Legislative Conflict: Cabinet Management, Obstructionism, and Legislative Delay in Brazil
Abstract This paper addresses a central issue in multiparty presidential systems: the functioning of legislative coalitions and the dynamics of legislative conflict. Since electoral competition has elements of both positive-sum (increase in common support) and zero-sum (exact division of the support) qualities, lawmaking in coalitional systems present unique challenges that may be absent in two-party systems. Using unique legislative data from Brazil, we examine how coalition management and unity affect legislative delay and obstructionism. We find that: (1) coalition management is pivotal for effective governance with respect to both faster legislative approval and less obstructionism; (2) the effect of coalition management depends on coalition size, i.e., it is particularly important when the coalition is small, but its positive effect diminishes as the coalition enlarges; and (3) opposition unity and government-opposition ideological divide impede the legislative process, but their effects are not as large as the effects of coalition management.