Congressional party defection in American history TP Nokken, KT Poole Legislative Studies Quarterly 29 (4), 545-568, 2004 | 239 | 2004 |
Dynamics of congressional loyalty: Party defection and roll-call behavior, 1947-97 TP Nokken Legis. Stud. Q. 25, 417, 2000 | 185 | 2000 |
Confirmation dynamics: A model of presidential appointments to independent agencies TP Nokken, BR Sala Journal of Theoretical Politics 12 (1), 91-112, 2000 | 113 | 2000 |
Partisanship, the electoral connection, and lame-duck sessions of Congress, 1877–2006 JA Jenkins, TP Nokken The Journal of Politics 70 (2), 450-465, 2008 | 56 | 2008 |
Party switching and the procedural party agenda in the US House of Representatives TP Nokken Political parties and legislative party switching, 81-108, 2009 | 40 | 2009 |
The institutional origins of the Republican Party: Spatial voting and the house speakership election of 1855-56 JA Jenkins, TP Nokken Legislative Studies Quarterly, 101-130, 2000 | 36 | 2000 |
Legislative shirking in the pre-Twentieth Amendment era: Presidential influence, party power, and lame-duck sessions of Congress, 1877–1933 JA Jenkins, TP Nokken Studies in American Political Development 22 (1), 111-140, 2008 | 33 | 2008 |
Ideological congruence versus electoral success: Distribution of party organization contributions in senate elections, 1990-2000 TP Nokken American Politics Research 31 (1), 3-26, 2003 | 27 | 2003 |
Lame-Duck legislators and consideration of the ship subsidy bill of 1922 C Goodman, TP Nokken American Politics Research 32 (4), 465-489, 2004 | 20 | 2004 |
The ideological ends against the middle: House roll call votes on normal trade relation status for China, 1990-2000 TP Nokken Congress & the Presidency: A Journal of Capital Studies 30 (2), 53-70, 2003 | 20 | 2003 |
Uncertainty and Roll‐Call Voting in Lame‐Duck Sessions of the US House, 1969–2010 TP Nokken Legislative Studies Quarterly 38 (4), 571-591, 2013 | 15 | 2013 |
Institutional context and party power: Member participation and leadership strategy in the lame-duck congressional era JA Jenkins, TP Nokken American Politics Research 39 (4), 724-753, 2011 | 9 | 2011 |
Congressional party defection in American history TP Nokken, KT Poole Available at SSRN 1154116, 2002 | 9 | 2002 |
‘The Electoral Disconnection: Roll Call Behavior in Lame Duck Sessions of the House of Representatives, 1879–1933 TP Nokken Party, process, and political change in Congress 2, 345-57, 2007 | 8 | 2007 |
A Spatial Interpretation of Senate Confirmations TP Nokken, BR Sala Journal of Theoretical Politics, 1999 | 8 | 1999 |
Is Four Twice as Nice as Two? A Natural Experiment on the Electoral Effects of Legislative Term Length BJ Gaines, TP Nokken, C Groebe State Politics & Policy Quarterly 12 (1), 43-57, 2012 | 7 | 2012 |
Institutional Evolution and the Rise of the Tuesday-Thursday Club in the House of Representatives TP Nokken, BR Sala Party, Process, and Political Change in Congress: New Perspectives on the …, 2002 | 7 | 2002 |
The Presidential Shadow on Midterm House Elections: Presidential Support, Presidential Agendas, and Seat Loss BJ Gaines, TP Nokken University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign. Typescript, 1999 | 7 | 1999 |
Roll-Call Behavior and Career Advancement: Analyzing Committee Assignments from Reconstruction to the New Deal C Goodman, TP Nokken Party, Process, and Political Change in Congress 2, 165-181, 2007 | 5 | 2007 |
Contemporary lame-duck sessions of Congress: An overview and assessment with special emphasis on the 110th Congress JA Jenkins, TP Nokken | 4 | 2021 |