Testing legislative shirking in a new setting: the case of lame duck sessions in the Korean National Assembly
- Authors
- Koo, Bon Sang; Kim, Junseok; Choi, Jun Young
- Issue Date
- Mar-2019
- Publisher
- CAMBRIDGE UNIV PRESS
- Keywords
- Legislative shirking; lame-duck sessions; two-part hurdle models; the Korean National Assembly
- Citation
- JAPANESE JOURNAL OF POLITICAL SCIENCE, v.20, no.1, pp 33 - 52
- Pages
- 20
- Indexed
- SSCI
SCOPUS
- Journal Title
- JAPANESE JOURNAL OF POLITICAL SCIENCE
- Volume
- 20
- Number
- 1
- Start Page
- 33
- End Page
- 52
- URI
- https://scholarworks.dongguk.edu/handle/sw.dongguk/8347
- DOI
- 10.1017/S1468109918000403
- ISSN
- 1468-1099
1474-0060
- Abstract
- This paper aims to test two types of legislative shirking in a new democracy, South Korea. Using the lame-duck sessions of the Korean National Assembly, we test whether a legislator shirks in voting participation and in voting decisions. We weave two competing motivations of legislative shirking in voting participation - that to secure more leisure time and that to utilize the last, valuable voting opportunity - into a synthetic hypothesis and test it with two-part hurdle models. To test a shirking in voting participation hypothesis, we analyze legislators' choices on bills that are supposedly related to the interests of constituents or political parties. Empirical results strongly support our shirking in voting participation claims, while only partial evidence is found on shirking in voting decisions. The findings suggest that, besides the trade-off between labor and leisure, some legislators deem the lame-duck sessions an opportunity to express their own preferences unconstrained.
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Collections - College of the Social Science > Division of Political Science & Public Administration > 1. Journal Articles

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