Testing legislator responsiveness to citizens and firms in single-party regimes: A field experiment in the vietnamese national assembly
Abstract
We investigate whether communicating constituents’ preferences to legislators increases
the responsiveness of delegates to the Vietnamese National Assembly (VNA). Using a
randomized control trial, we assign legislators to three groups: (1) those briefed
on the opinions of their provincial citizenry, (2) those presented with the preferences
of local firms, and (3) those receiving only information on the Communist Party’s
objectives. Because voting data are not public, we collect data on a range of other
potentially responsive behaviors during the 2018 session. These include answers to
a VNA Library survey about debate readiness; whether delegates spoke in group caucuses,
query sessions, and floor debates; and the content of those speeches. We find consistent
evidence that citizen-treated delegates were more responsive, via debate preparation
and the decision to speak, than control delegates; evidence from speech content is
mixed.
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Journal articlePermalink
https://hdl.handle.net/10161/25961Published Version (Please cite this version)
10.1086/715169Publication Info
Todd, JD; Malesky, EJ; Tran, A; & Le, QA (2021). Testing legislator responsiveness to citizens and firms in single-party regimes: A
field experiment in the vietnamese national assembly. Journal of Politics, 83(4). pp. 1573-1588. 10.1086/715169. Retrieved from https://hdl.handle.net/10161/25961.This is constructed from limited available data and may be imprecise. To cite this
article, please review & use the official citation provided by the journal.
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Edmund Malesky
Professor of Political Science
Malesky is a specialist on Southeast Asia, particularly Vietnam. Currently, Malesky's
research agenda is very much at the intersection of Comparative and International
Political Economy, falling into three major categories: 1) Authoritarian political
institutions and their consequences; 2) The political influence of foreign direct
investment and multinational corporations; and 3) Political institutions, private
business development, and formalization.
Jason Douglas Todd
Assistant Professor of Political Science at Duke Kunshan University
I am an Assistant Professor at Duke Kunshan University, where I teach political science
and public policy. I received my Ph.D. in Political Science from <
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