The House Appropriations Committee as a Political System: The Problem of Integration.
- 1 June 1962
- journal article
- Published by Cambridge University Press (CUP) in American Political Science Review
- Vol. 56 (2), 310-324
- https://doi.org/10.2307/1952367
Abstract
Studies of Congress by political scientists have produced a time-tested consensus on the very considerable power and autonomy of Congressional committees. Because of these two related characteristics, it makes empirical and analytical sense to treat the Congressional committee as a discrete unit for analysis. This paper conceives of the committee as a political system (or, more accurately as a political subsystem) faced with a number of basic problems which it must solve in order to achieve its goals and maintain itself. Generally speaking these functional problems pertain to the environmental and the internal relations of the committee. This study is concerned almost exclusively with the internal problems of the committee and particularly with the problem of self-integration. It describes how one congressional committee—The Committee on Appropriations of the House of Representatives—has dealt with this problem in the period 1947–1961. Its purpose is to add to our understanding of appropriations politics in Congress and to suggest the usefulness of this type of analysis for studying the activities of any congressional committee.Keywords
This publication has 4 references indexed in Scilit:
- The Congressional PartyAmerican Political Science Review, 1960
- Social Theory and Social StructureThe American Catholic Sociological Review, 1958
- The Omnibus Appropriations act of 1950The Journal of Politics, 1953
- Toward a General Theory of ActionPublished by Harvard University Press ,1951