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Ballotwatch August 2008

View photos and video from the Managing Budget Policy in Times of Economic Turmoil Symposium

Direct Democracy and the Law

Budget Crisis is Built on Spending Gone Wild

Sacramento Bee OpEd by John Matsusaka

Where Does All That State Money Go?

LOS ANGELES TIMES: John Matsusaka of USC's Initiative and Referendum Institute wrote an op-ed about California's state spending. "California state government spent $145 billion last fiscal year, $41 billion more than four years ago when Gov. Gray Davis got recalled by voters," Matsusaka wrote. "So why does it seem like the quality and quantity of government is not all that different from 2004?" he added. "Voters are criticized for wanting more services yet being unwilling to pay higher taxes.

But if spending can go up 40% and most of us can't discern any difference, can we blame voters for being hesitant to put even more tax money in the hands of the state?"

CSLP Symposiums: Video of 2007-2008 Symposiums »

CSLP Publications»

 

Survey Information »

Local Governance and Direct Democracy Project.          Funded by a generous grant from the John Randolph Haynes and Dora Haynes Foundation.

Inquiries and Proposals

For information or inquiries regarding the Center or to submit proposals or papers, please contact Peggy J. Vadillo, Program Coordinator for the USC-Caltech Center for the Study of Law and Politics, at:

pvadillo@law.usc.edu
or
(213) 740-8320.

Welcome to the CSLP Web Site

The USC-Caltech Center for the Study of Law and Politics (CSLP) is a unique network of inter-connected scholars, drawn from diverse disciplines such as law, political science, economics, public administration, psychology, and communications. Since its creation in 2000, the Center's scholars have combined law and the social sciences to study voters, democratic institutions, the political process and the law. In January 2004, the Initiative and Referendum Institute (IRI), the nation's most prominent educational and research organization focused on direct democracy, moved to USC and joined the CSLP. Together, these two institutions form the leading center in the United States to study the tools of popular government: initiative, referendum and recall. In addition to maintaining the award-winning Ballotwatch service with current and historical data on initiatives and referendums in the U.S., the IRI and CSLP plan projects to study the influence of direct democracy on local governments, particularly urban centers like Los Angeles, and the effects of new information technologies on the process. 

The CSLP and IRI along with the Lusk Center for Real Estate at USC are developing a database and a body of scholarly work that will help policy makers, citizens, and scholars better understand the use and consequences of initiatives and referendums in cities and counties across the nation. The Local Governance and Direct Democracy Project, funded with a generous grant from the John Randolph Haynes and Dora Haynes Foundation, will focus on I&R at the local level. Initially gathering data from localities in Southern California, where direct democracy first took root at a local level, and then from locations nationwide, this project has produced and will continue producing an extensive online database on the characteristics and outcomes of local initiatives and referendums. 

News

INITIATIVE & REFERENDUM INSTITUTE REPORTS

IRI Ballotwatch 2007 Election RESULTS

IRI Ballotwatch 2007 Election Preview

The IRI offers an Overview of Initiative and Referendum use, 1904-2006

LOCAL GOVERNANCE AND DIRECT DEMORACY PROJECT REPORTS

CSLP Working Paper 53
Direct Democracy and Social Issues
By John Matsusaka

CSLP Working Paper 52
Direct Democracy and Public Employees
By John Matsusaka

CSLP Working Paper 51
Institutions and Popular Control of Public Policy
By John Matsusaka

Information, Policy Tradeoffs and Direct Democracy: Do Initiatives Improve Public Infrastructure Investment?
A report by CSLP Co-Director Mathew D. McCubbins

Faith in Reason: Voter Competence and Local Bond Propositions
By Elizabeth Garrett and Mathew D. McCubbins

 

Conferences & Workshops





 

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