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Timothy P. Nokken
Timothy P. Nokken
Associate Professor Political Science, Texas Tech University
Verified email at ttu.edu
Title
Cited by
Cited by
Year
Congressional party defection in American history
TP Nokken, KT Poole
Legislative Studies Quarterly 29 (4), 545-568, 2004
2392004
Dynamics of congressional loyalty: Party defection and roll-call behavior, 1947-97
TP Nokken
Legis. Stud. Q. 25, 417, 2000
1852000
Confirmation dynamics: A model of presidential appointments to independent agencies
TP Nokken, BR Sala
Journal of Theoretical Politics 12 (1), 91-112, 2000
1132000
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
562008
Party switching and the procedural party agenda in the US House of Representatives
TP Nokken
Political parties and legislative party switching, 81-108, 2009
402009
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
362000
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
332008
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
272003
Lame-Duck legislators and consideration of the ship subsidy bill of 1922
C Goodman, TP Nokken
American Politics Research 32 (4), 465-489, 2004
202004
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
202003
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
152013
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
92011
Congressional party defection in American history
TP Nokken, KT Poole
Available at SSRN 1154116, 2002
92002
‘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
82007
A Spatial Interpretation of Senate Confirmations
TP Nokken, BR Sala
Journal of Theoretical Politics, 1999
81999
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
72012
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
72002
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
71999
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
52007
Contemporary lame-duck sessions of Congress: An overview and assessment with special emphasis on the 110th Congress
JA Jenkins, TP Nokken
42021
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