Collaborating on the Carceral State: Political Elite Polarization and the Expansion of Federal Crime Legislation Networks, 1979 to 2005

Scott W. Duxbury
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Abstract

Lawmakers are routinely confronted by urgent social issues, yet they hold conflicting policy preferences, incentives, and goals that can undermine collaboration. How do lawmakers collaborate on solutions to urgent issues in the presence of conflicts? I argue that by building mutual trust, networks provide a mechanism to overcome the risks conflict imposes on policy collaboration. But, in doing so, network dependence constrains lawmakers’ ability to react to the problems that motivate policy action beyond their immediate connections. I test this argument using machine learning and longitudinal analysis of federal crime legislation co-sponsorship networks between 1979 and 2005, a period of rising political elite polarization. Results show that elite polarization increased the effects of reciprocal action and prior collaboration on crime legislation co-sponsorships while suppressing the effect of violent crime rates. These relationships vary only marginally by political party and are pronounced for ratified criminal laws. The findings provide new insights to the role of collaboration networks in the historical development of the carceral state and elucidate how political actors pursue collective policy action on urgent issues in the presence of conflict.
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合作建立监狱国家:政治精英两极分化与联邦犯罪立法网络的扩张,1979 年至 2005 年
立法者经常面临紧迫的社会问题,但他们的政策偏好、动机和目标却相互冲突,这可能会破坏合作。在存在冲突的情况下,立法者如何合作解决紧急问题?我认为,通过建立互信,网络提供了一种机制来克服冲突给政策合作带来的风险。但是,在这样做的同时,网络依赖性也限制了立法者对问题做出反应的能力,而这些问题促使他们在直接联系之外采取政策行动。在政治精英两极分化加剧的 1979 年至 2005 年间,我使用机器学习和纵向分析联邦犯罪立法共同提案网络来验证这一论点。结果显示,精英两极分化增加了互惠行动和先前合作对犯罪立法共同提案的影响,同时抑制了暴力犯罪率的影响。这些关系仅因政党不同而略有差异,并且在已批准的刑事法律中表现明显。研究结果为协作网络在监禁国家历史发展中的作用提供了新的见解,并阐明了政治行为体如何在存在冲突的情况下就紧急问题采取集体政策行动。
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