In 2011 New Zealand held a referendum on the future of its voting system for general elections. Following the referendum, the current voting system was retained, and the Electoral Commission reviewed the system and made recommendations for change in late 2012. In early 2013 the government’s response to those recommendations is still awaited. Recognising the importance of this process, this article considers an alternative approach to electoral reform, drawing on the experiences of Canada’s and Holland’s use of citizens’ assemblies in the electoral policy-making process.The article considers the merits and limitations of citizens’ assemblies for electoral reform, particularly in the New Zealand context. It proposes the form and function of a...
In the eighty years between the passage of New Zealand's first unified Electoral Act in 1927, and th...
This article addresses the question of possible constitutional reform, specifically in the New Zeala...
New Zealand’s 2014 election “did its job”, in the sense that it permitted a government to form and f...
The 2012 Report of the Electoral Commission on the Review of the MMP system recommended that several...
This article compares the use of people outside government to consider electoral reform in three c...
This research paper provides a brief history of the parliamentary voting systems used in New Zealand...
Proposals by the UK Coalition government, which came into power in May 2010, to alter the electoral ...
For a comparatively small and geographically peripheral nation, New Zealand enjoyed a moment of psep...
1Ontario's 2007 referendum on electoral reform, which resulted in the retention of the present ...
The British Columbian Citizens ’ Assembly on Electoral Reform comprised a representative group of 16...
This Article considers the process by which electoral reform ought to take place, focusing in partic...
This article addresses one particular feature of New Zealand’s constitution: the continuing combinat...
New Zealand is known as one of the most democratic countries of the world, especially thanks to the ...
tag=1 data=New Zealand's electoral reform. by Wayne Mapp tag=2 data=Mapp, Wayne tag=3 data=Policy,...
New Zealand's political landscape experienced a seismic shift in 1993, when the country replaced the...
In the eighty years between the passage of New Zealand's first unified Electoral Act in 1927, and th...
This article addresses the question of possible constitutional reform, specifically in the New Zeala...
New Zealand’s 2014 election “did its job”, in the sense that it permitted a government to form and f...
The 2012 Report of the Electoral Commission on the Review of the MMP system recommended that several...
This article compares the use of people outside government to consider electoral reform in three c...
This research paper provides a brief history of the parliamentary voting systems used in New Zealand...
Proposals by the UK Coalition government, which came into power in May 2010, to alter the electoral ...
For a comparatively small and geographically peripheral nation, New Zealand enjoyed a moment of psep...
1Ontario's 2007 referendum on electoral reform, which resulted in the retention of the present ...
The British Columbian Citizens ’ Assembly on Electoral Reform comprised a representative group of 16...
This Article considers the process by which electoral reform ought to take place, focusing in partic...
This article addresses one particular feature of New Zealand’s constitution: the continuing combinat...
New Zealand is known as one of the most democratic countries of the world, especially thanks to the ...
tag=1 data=New Zealand's electoral reform. by Wayne Mapp tag=2 data=Mapp, Wayne tag=3 data=Policy,...
New Zealand's political landscape experienced a seismic shift in 1993, when the country replaced the...
In the eighty years between the passage of New Zealand's first unified Electoral Act in 1927, and th...
This article addresses the question of possible constitutional reform, specifically in the New Zeala...
New Zealand’s 2014 election “did its job”, in the sense that it permitted a government to form and f...