Speed, legislatures and international treaties: Evidence from Mercosur
Leite Araujo, Andre <1993>
Subject
SPS/04 Scienza politica
Description
What causes faster or slower procedures in the parliaments when considering international treaties? This question motivates the current research, which aims to understand how the nature of coalitions influence the duration of the legislative processes. For this, the analysis covers all the treaties signed by Mercosur between 1991 and 2021 and the internalisation processes in four member states (Argentina, Brazil, Paraguay and Uruguay). It observes how long each parliament took to approve the treaties and which was the effect of political and economic variables. A mixed-methods approach was adopted for the empirical research, combining Survival Analysis, Qualitative Comparative Analysis and Process Tracing. While the quantitative work investigates all the cases, the qualitative study illuminates the enlargement of Mercosur, with in-depth analysis of the Paraguayan approval of the Venezuelan and Bolivian accessions. This study provides important insights into the role of national legislatures in the Latin American regionalism, concluding that the government-opposition cleavage drives the parliamentarians’ behaviour on the topic of regional integration. The study also contributes to the field Mercosur studies with the characterisation of the treaties ratified domestically, by undertaking a longitudinal analysis at the 30th anniversary of the bloc.
Leite Araujo, Andre (2022) Speed, legislatures and international treaties: Evidence from Mercosur, [Dissertation thesis], Alma Mater Studiorum UniversitĂ di Bologna. Dottorato di ricerca in Scienze politiche e sociali , 34 Ciclo. DOI 10.48676/unibo/amsdottorato/10239.