Publicaciones UdeSA
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- ItemA coagulation estimate for inertial particles(2007-06) Armendáriz, Inés; Norris, James R.
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- ItemA Hahn-Banach Theorem for Integral Polynomials(1997-11) Carando, Daniel; Zalduendo, Ignacio
- ItemA model of TFP(2001-06)
- ItemA Nonparametric Approach to the Estimation of Lengths and Surface Areas(2006-03) Cuevas, Antonio; Fraiman, Ricardo; Rodríguez-Casal, Alberto
- ItemA note on the suboptimality of right-of-first-refusal clauses(2006) Weinschelbaum, Federico; Arozamena, Leandro
- ItemA Note on Wealth as a Corruption-Controlling Device(2005-03) Di Tella, Rafael
- ItemA Polynomial Topology on Banach Spaces(2001-03) Silvia, Lasalle
- ItemA positive theory of legislative intent(1992-03)
- ItemA principal-agent building block for the study of decentralization and integration(1999-11) Tommasi, Mariano; Weinschelbaum, Federico
- ItemA Pseudodifferential Regularization Method(2005-11) Barraza, Oscar; Sanmartino, Marcela; Zuccalli, Marcela
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- ItemA Sharp Form of the Cramer-Wold Theorem(2004-10) Cuesta-Albertos, Juan Antonio; Fraiman, Ricardo; Ransford, Thomas
- ItemA Tailor-Made Nonparametric Density Estimate(2006-02) Carando, Daniel; Fraiman, Ricardo; Groisman, Pablo
- ItemA tale of two Latin American congresses : towards a comparative study of institutionalization and effectiveness(2013-06) Palanza, M. Valeria; Scartascini, Carlos G.; Tommasi, MarianoThis paper is concerned with the characteristics, determinants and consequences of varying levels of congressional institutionalization. Our work can be traced back to the early work on congressional institutionalization done by Polsby (1968), which is complemented here by the game-theoretic notion that institutionalization is an equilibrium outcome that emerges from the beliefs and investments made by relevant political actors. The paper explores key characteristics and trends surrounding legislative careers and congressional assets such as organization and resources. It does so to uncover the effects of different belief systems and investment dynamics on levels of institutionalization and, ultimately, on policy outcomes. We approach our puzzle by analyzing two close yet contrasting cases: Argentina and Chile, which possess stark differences on many policy and institutional dimensions, despite relatively similar constitutional settings.