This paper addresses some residual misunderstandings about the effects of compulsory voting and, in particular, the effectiveness of compulsory voting laws as a mechanism to stimulate voting turnout. It also compares its efficacy with alternative turnout-raising mechanisms. Some critics of compulsory voting refer to the minimal percentage difference of voter turnout between compulsory and voluntary voting electoral systems. We address studies in which the effectiveness of compulsory voting is either underplayed or miscalculated due to an inappropriate use of atypical cases or a methodological error known as the ‘ecological fallacy’. Specifically, treating all compulsory voting regimes as a synthetic group can give rise to inaccurate percept...
Should voting be compulsory? Many people believe that it should, and that coun- tries, like Britain,...
Despite the substantial body of research on compulsory voting's (CV) relationship with turnout, much...
What lies behind voter disengagement? While some blame a crumbling political and electoral infrastru...
© 2005 The University of SydneyIn this paper we address claims made by those supporting the abolitio...
Electoral turnout in UK elections has been disappointing over recent cycles, despite a small uptick ...
Some opponents of compulsory voting claim that rising rates of informal voting point to growing anti...
The paper is focused on the problem of «compulsory voting» inside the contemporary democracies. The ...
Voter turnout levels have been steadily declining in the whole of the world’s democracies, for the l...
Some opponents of compulsory voting claim that rising rates of informal voting point to growing anti...
About a quarter of all democracies today legally oblige their citizens to vote, making this an impor...
As voter turnout is steadily declining in Western democracies, various authors have expressed concer...
The case of compulsory voting. The case against compulsory voting. Incentives: a modern alternative ...
Low turnout is a growing concern among the industrial democracies. Compulsory voting has achieved ve...
Should voting be compulsory? Many people believe that it should, and that countries, like Britain, w...
In a recent issue of Politics Ben Saunders argued that the use of compulsory voting to increase turn...
Should voting be compulsory? Many people believe that it should, and that coun- tries, like Britain,...
Despite the substantial body of research on compulsory voting's (CV) relationship with turnout, much...
What lies behind voter disengagement? While some blame a crumbling political and electoral infrastru...
© 2005 The University of SydneyIn this paper we address claims made by those supporting the abolitio...
Electoral turnout in UK elections has been disappointing over recent cycles, despite a small uptick ...
Some opponents of compulsory voting claim that rising rates of informal voting point to growing anti...
The paper is focused on the problem of «compulsory voting» inside the contemporary democracies. The ...
Voter turnout levels have been steadily declining in the whole of the world’s democracies, for the l...
Some opponents of compulsory voting claim that rising rates of informal voting point to growing anti...
About a quarter of all democracies today legally oblige their citizens to vote, making this an impor...
As voter turnout is steadily declining in Western democracies, various authors have expressed concer...
The case of compulsory voting. The case against compulsory voting. Incentives: a modern alternative ...
Low turnout is a growing concern among the industrial democracies. Compulsory voting has achieved ve...
Should voting be compulsory? Many people believe that it should, and that countries, like Britain, w...
In a recent issue of Politics Ben Saunders argued that the use of compulsory voting to increase turn...
Should voting be compulsory? Many people believe that it should, and that coun- tries, like Britain,...
Despite the substantial body of research on compulsory voting's (CV) relationship with turnout, much...
What lies behind voter disengagement? While some blame a crumbling political and electoral infrastru...