Should the law intervene to ensure that political parties, as organisations, conform to democratic principles? Should members have the legal right to participate in a party\u27s decision-making process? Or, at the very least, can a party be held legally accountable for failing to abide by its own rules and constitution? Anika Gauja discusses these and related questions
A healthy democracy relies on a healthy electoral system. Are the ways we run elections and politica...
This paper reviews recent allegations of electoral misconduct, especially in the context of pre-sele...
In recent decades, membership of established parties in parliamentary democracies such as Australia ...
Overview Trust in political parties has never been lower, but we have more and more of them, to the...
"Trust in political parties has never been lower, but we have more and more of them, to the point wh...
Australian politics has been synonymous with party politics for much of its history. Today the stro...
Australian political parties have to date functioned very much as private bodies, but public demand...
Party government is the organisational arrangement that characterises many parliaments in contempora...
This paper presents a comparative analysis of the legal regulation of political parties as competit...
This paper explores how political parties should be regulated in jurisdictions with anti-defection l...
Australia is often said tobe the onlydemocratic nation without a national Bill of Rights, Human Righ...
Political parties are an important, indeed almost ubiquitous, feature of liberal-democracy systems o...
Although democratic states increasingly regulate political parties, we know little about how legal e...
© 1952 Dr. Russell H. BarrettDo party candidates for Parliament campaign upon reasonably clear and c...
Competition between candidates representing political parties is usually regarded as a central featu...
A healthy democracy relies on a healthy electoral system. Are the ways we run elections and politica...
This paper reviews recent allegations of electoral misconduct, especially in the context of pre-sele...
In recent decades, membership of established parties in parliamentary democracies such as Australia ...
Overview Trust in political parties has never been lower, but we have more and more of them, to the...
"Trust in political parties has never been lower, but we have more and more of them, to the point wh...
Australian politics has been synonymous with party politics for much of its history. Today the stro...
Australian political parties have to date functioned very much as private bodies, but public demand...
Party government is the organisational arrangement that characterises many parliaments in contempora...
This paper presents a comparative analysis of the legal regulation of political parties as competit...
This paper explores how political parties should be regulated in jurisdictions with anti-defection l...
Australia is often said tobe the onlydemocratic nation without a national Bill of Rights, Human Righ...
Political parties are an important, indeed almost ubiquitous, feature of liberal-democracy systems o...
Although democratic states increasingly regulate political parties, we know little about how legal e...
© 1952 Dr. Russell H. BarrettDo party candidates for Parliament campaign upon reasonably clear and c...
Competition between candidates representing political parties is usually regarded as a central featu...
A healthy democracy relies on a healthy electoral system. Are the ways we run elections and politica...
This paper reviews recent allegations of electoral misconduct, especially in the context of pre-sele...
In recent decades, membership of established parties in parliamentary democracies such as Australia ...