The elections to the Swiss Federal Council in December 2015 re-established a system of party-centred concordance, cherished in consociational theory, consisting of two representatives of the Swiss People's Party, two Radicals, two Social Democrats and one Christian Democrat. At the same time, the government has rarely been as unbalanced in terms of the representation of Switzerland's languages and regions. The article analyses the concept of concordance with regard to both aspects of governmental inclusiveness. It also highlights the crucial role of electoral rules used in governmental elections. It argues that they resemble the Alternative Vote, a majoritarian electoral system that has been criticized in consociational theory but prescribe...
The Swiss party system and the institutional rules guiding elections are an anchor of stability in S...
In Switzerland, there are 26 systems of cantonal decentralisation because regulating municipal auton...
The contemporary idea that a parliament acts as a mirror of voter’s party preferences is historicall...
Central to consociational (or power-sharing) theory is the claim that multicultural societies requir...
Large coalition governments, including all relevant parties, are at the heart of the consociational ...
The political system of Switzerland is unique and in no other country around the world exists a syst...
In the following article the author covers the process of counting the votes and the disclosure rule...
This paper analyses citizens’ voting behaviour in the April 2011 elections of the regional governmen...
The 2015 federal elections in Switzerland brought a shift to the political right and re-established ...
Federalism and decentralisation offer political parties the opportunity to tailor their policy-seeki...
Prospects for democracy in multi-ethnic societies are generally more promising if elections are not ...
This paper considers the interdependencies between ‘policy balancing’, where voters decide to suppor...
Abstract: It is commonly believed that majority voting enhances parties to cluster around the centre...
Applying rational choice approaches of politics, I analyze why major policy changes are unlikely to ...
This paper analyses the impact of district-level and national-level incentives on strategic voting. ...
The Swiss party system and the institutional rules guiding elections are an anchor of stability in S...
In Switzerland, there are 26 systems of cantonal decentralisation because regulating municipal auton...
The contemporary idea that a parliament acts as a mirror of voter’s party preferences is historicall...
Central to consociational (or power-sharing) theory is the claim that multicultural societies requir...
Large coalition governments, including all relevant parties, are at the heart of the consociational ...
The political system of Switzerland is unique and in no other country around the world exists a syst...
In the following article the author covers the process of counting the votes and the disclosure rule...
This paper analyses citizens’ voting behaviour in the April 2011 elections of the regional governmen...
The 2015 federal elections in Switzerland brought a shift to the political right and re-established ...
Federalism and decentralisation offer political parties the opportunity to tailor their policy-seeki...
Prospects for democracy in multi-ethnic societies are generally more promising if elections are not ...
This paper considers the interdependencies between ‘policy balancing’, where voters decide to suppor...
Abstract: It is commonly believed that majority voting enhances parties to cluster around the centre...
Applying rational choice approaches of politics, I analyze why major policy changes are unlikely to ...
This paper analyses the impact of district-level and national-level incentives on strategic voting. ...
The Swiss party system and the institutional rules guiding elections are an anchor of stability in S...
In Switzerland, there are 26 systems of cantonal decentralisation because regulating municipal auton...
The contemporary idea that a parliament acts as a mirror of voter’s party preferences is historicall...