Politics and eminent domain: Evidence form the 1879 California Constitution
- URL
- https://www.openicpsr.org/openicpsr/project/193326
- Description
Explores the politics of eminent domain, using a specific historical episode: the enactment of the new California constitution in 1879. It presents evidence that the failure of a constitutional provision that would have codified eminent domain powers for water development resulted from a complex interchange of economic interests among farmers, miners, and urban residents. This evidence was manifested in delegate behavior on the floor of the constitutional convention in 1878, including various roll-call votes, which are subjected to an econometric analysis. The results have implications for the interpretation of legislative eminent domain decisions, and the degree to which economic development processes are shaped by the institutional environment in which they occur.
Geographic Coverage: California
Time Period: 1878 – 1879
Universe: Delegates to 1878 California constitutional convention
Data Type: roll call voting data
Collection Notes: Drawn from Debates and Proceedings of the 1878 California constitutional convention.
Sampling: All voting delegates
Data Source: Debates and proceedings of the 1878 California constitutional convention
Unit of Observation: roll-call votes
- Sample
- Format
- Single study
- Country
- United States
- Title
- Politics and eminent domain: Evidence form the 1879 California Constitution
- Format
- Single study