In this provocative new look at Congress, Brian Alexander shows us how cooperation and conflict coexist internally, with the norms of the former still predominant but the norms of the latter more routine and ascendant in the 21st Century.
— Donald R. Wolfensberger, Director of The Congress Project, The Woodrow Wilson International Center for Congress, Director of The Congress Project, The Woodrow Wilson International Center for Scholars
A Social Theory of Congress reminds us that legislative norms are real, and therefore any effort to understand why legislators behave as they do needs to take account of how congresspersons understand right and wrong within their professions.
— Kevin Kosar, American Enterprise Institute
Few scholars have paid close attention to the powerful role that norms play in Congress. In his smart, theoretically-grounded book A Social Theory of Congress, Brian Alexander identifies key congressional norms and shines new light on the ways they shape what lawmakers do. Alexander's fresh perspective on Congress should be read by every serious student of American politics.
— Matthew N. Green, Catholic University of America
Brian Alexander’s study of changing norms in the United States Congress is a welcome addition and much-needed update to the literature on the congressional norms. His painstaking work to document the persistence of norms of cooperation and to uncover new norms of conflict in both the U.S. House and U.S. Senate provides a valuable service to scholars and students by revealing the ways in which members understand what it means to serve in the national legislature. In so doing, he demonstrates that norms shape both members’ personal and representative behaviors as well as influence the content and quality of the laws our Congress crafts, and suggests important considerations about the impact of changing norms.
— Lauren C. Bell, Randolph-Macon College
Alexander's important new book studies how the unwritten rules of Congress -- congressional norms -- have changed, evolved, or been re-written in an era of hyperpartisanship, polarization, and intense institutional strain. Alexander shows that while political conflict is undeniably on the rise, lawmakers still rely heavily on norms of cooperation to get things done. This book is an important read for any congressional observer interested in a deeper understanding of how Congress works and why lawmakers behave as they do.
— Casey Burgat, Graduate School of Political Management, The George Washington University