The Shadowlands of Conduct: Ethics and State Politics

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Georgetown University Press, Mar 29, 2005 - Political Science - 272 pages

Although the linking of "ethics" and "politics" may seem more like the ingredients for a comedian's monologue, it is a sober issue and one that affects every American—especially when it comes to state politics, where the cynical might say ethics can never survive. To find examples of the latest corruption du jour, all one has to do is turn to the newspaper, or switch on the local newscast (think Illinois and New Jersey).

Scandals have been ubiquitous since the beginning of the Republic, but it wasn't until 1954 that ethical self-regulation began to move legislatively beyond bribery statutes to address deeper issues—those which, in New York Governor Thomas Dewey's words, skulked in the "shadowlands of conduct." Rosenson begins her exploration with that moment when New York became the first state to enact a general ethics law, setting standards and guidelines for behavior. Unforgiving and illuminating, she examines the many laws that have been enacted since and the reasons that many of these law came into being.

It is crucial to the functioning of a democratic government to understand how and why ethics laws vary across legislatures, and it is surprising to discover that many states have become far more stringent than the U.S. Congress in laws and regulations. Using both qualitative historical sources and rigorous statistical analysis, Rosenson examines when and why, from 1954 to the present, legislators have enacted ethics laws that seem to threaten their own well-being. Among the economic, political, and institutional factors considered that have helped or hindered the passage of these laws, the most consistent was pure scandal, abetted by the media. To have good government, one must be able to trust it, and this book can help all citizens understand and find their way out of the shadowlands into the light.

 

Contents

Setting the Stage Legislative Ethics and the Process of Ethics Reform
1
Three Case Studies Initial Explanations of Ethics Reform Failure and Success
18
Ethics Laws in the PreWatergate Period 195472 Early Innovation in Regulating Legislative Conflicts of Interest
57
Watergate and Beyond Ethics Reform Moves Forward 197396
90
The Mostly Toothless Tiger The Authorization of Independent Ethics Commissions 197396 and Beyond
114
Ethical SelfRegulation and Its Limitations
135
Appendix to Chapter 1 and General Appendix for 1996 Ethics Index
151
Models and Data Sources for Chapter 3
162
Models and Data Sources for Chapter 4
175
Regression Tables for Chapter 4
183
Models and Data Sources for Chapter 5
188
Regression Tables for Chapter 5
191
notes
195
references
233
index
247
Copyright

Regression Tables for Chapter 3
170

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About the author (2005)

Beth A. Rosenson is assistant professor in the Department of Political Science at the University of Florida.

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