Título: The 2005 and 2009 Referenda on Voting System Change in British Columbia
Autores: Pilon, Dennis; University of Victoria
Fecha: 2010-10-09
Publicador: Canadian Political Science Review: a new journal of political science
Fuente:

Tipo: info:eu-repo/semantics/article
info:eu-repo/semantics/publishedVersion
Tema: No aplica
Descripción: British Columbia’s two referenda on its voting system produced dramatically different results. Conventional accounts of the events tend to rely on populism to explain the surprisingly high vote for the single transferable vote option in 2005 and public concern about the workings of this proposed alternative to explain the decline in its support in 2009. But as public knowledge about the referendum choices remained low in both cases it is hard to credit public reactions to the voting system options as a key factor influencing the results. A more critical reading of the events and existing academic survey work on both referenda suggest that elite manipulation of the process and changing levels of partisan insecurity between the two votes were more influential in producing these different outcomes.
Idioma: Inglés

Artículos similares:

Sustaining a Dynasty in Alberta: The 2004 Provincial Election por Bell, Edward; Brescia University College, at the University of Western Ontario,Jansen, Harold; University of Lethbridge,Young, Lisa; University of Calgary
The 2006 Provincial Election in Nova Scotia por Turnbull, Lori; Dalhousie University
The Antecedents to Cascadia as a Cross Border Region por McDougall, A K; UWO,Phillips, Lisa; University of Alberta
Multi-level Governance: Getting the Job Done and Respecting Community Difference – Three Winnipeg Cases por Leo, Christopher; University of Winnipeg,Pyl, Mike; University of Winnipeg
A Proposal for a Borderland Dispute Settlement Continuum Mechanism por Gal-Or, Noemi; Kwantlen Polytechnical University
The 2007 Provincial Election in Newfoundland and Labrador por Marland, Alex; Memorial University of Newfoundland
10