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@book{ Gschwend2009,
 title = {Assigning committee seats in mixed-member systems: how important is "localness" compared to the mode of election?},
 author = {Gschwend, Thomas and Shugart, Matthew S. and Zittel, Thomas},
 year = {2009},
 pages = {34},
 address = {Mannheim},
 urn = {https://nbn-resolving.org/urn:nbn:de:0168-ssoar-257679},
 abstract = {"Committees are important features in legislative decision making. The question of who
serves on what committee is thus an important one. This paper asks about how mixed electoral
systems affect the way committee seats are allocated. Stratmann and Baur (2002) argue that
German parties strategically assign nominally elected legislators to those committees that allow
them to please their local constituents. Our paper questions this argument in light of the
functioning of the German mixed-member system and the individual motivations of German
MPs. We argue that the motivations of German legislators do not necessarily mirror their mode
of election, and that German parties do not necessarily perceive winning nominal votes as a
predominant goal. We hypothesize that German parties aim to increase their vote share on the
list-vote (Zweitstimme) by supporting legislators with a strong local focus independent of their
mode of election. We will test this argument empirically drawing from the German Candidate
Study 2005 and from statistical data on committee membership for the 16th German Bundestag
(2005-2009)." (author's abstract)},
 keywords = {Bundesrepublik Deutschland; party; Wahlsystem; Bundestag; preference; Zweitstimme; electoral system; parlamentarischer Ausschuss; Federal Republic of Germany; election campaign; Partei; second vote; parliamentary committee; Abgeordneter; representative; political science; Politikwissenschaft; electoral district; Wahlkampf; Kommunalwahl; Kandidatur; Wahlkreis; Präferenz; local election; candidacy; Bundestag}}