Analyzing the voting behavior of Swiss members of parliament (MP) using newly collected individual, district, and cantonal level data, we show that both electoral disproportionalities and the insurgent parties’ electoral potential are important determinants of MP voting behavior on the adoption of proportional representation (PR). However, in contrast to the prominent electoral threat thesis, the insurgent party’s high electoral potential decreases the probability that MPs of established parties support PR. The reason for this relationship is partisan redistricting, whose relevance has so far been largely ignored in the literature. We demonstrate that adapting electoral district boundaries for political reasons, if possible in a given insti...
Some countries attempt to ‘temper’ the political party system unpredictability by introducing measur...
Do electoral systems matter for the outcomes of democratic politics beyond their well-known relation...
The contemporary idea that a parliament acts as a mirror of voter’s party preferences is historicall...
Analyzing the voting behavior of Swiss members of parliament (MP) using newly collected individual, ...
Electoral engineering strategies in majoritarian electoral systems, in particular the possibility to...
The debate between economic and political explanations of the adoption of proportional representatio...
The question how different electoral systems affect the represention of voters in parliaments has be...
Not all proportional representation (PR) systems are equally proportional. Some PR systems favour la...
The debate between economic and political explanations of the adoption of proportional representatio...
The paper analyses the positional congruence between pre-election statements in the Swiss voting ass...
The “doppelter Pukelsheim”, as the biproportional divisor method with standard rounding is colloquia...
The question how different electoral systems affect the represention of voters in parliaments has be...
As the first country to introduce proportional representation (PR), Belgium has attracted considerab...
This paper considers the interdependencies between ‘policy balancing’, where voters decide to suppor...
The question how voter preferences relate to preferences of representatives under different electora...
Some countries attempt to ‘temper’ the political party system unpredictability by introducing measur...
Do electoral systems matter for the outcomes of democratic politics beyond their well-known relation...
The contemporary idea that a parliament acts as a mirror of voter’s party preferences is historicall...
Analyzing the voting behavior of Swiss members of parliament (MP) using newly collected individual, ...
Electoral engineering strategies in majoritarian electoral systems, in particular the possibility to...
The debate between economic and political explanations of the adoption of proportional representatio...
The question how different electoral systems affect the represention of voters in parliaments has be...
Not all proportional representation (PR) systems are equally proportional. Some PR systems favour la...
The debate between economic and political explanations of the adoption of proportional representatio...
The paper analyses the positional congruence between pre-election statements in the Swiss voting ass...
The “doppelter Pukelsheim”, as the biproportional divisor method with standard rounding is colloquia...
The question how different electoral systems affect the represention of voters in parliaments has be...
As the first country to introduce proportional representation (PR), Belgium has attracted considerab...
This paper considers the interdependencies between ‘policy balancing’, where voters decide to suppor...
The question how voter preferences relate to preferences of representatives under different electora...
Some countries attempt to ‘temper’ the political party system unpredictability by introducing measur...
Do electoral systems matter for the outcomes of democratic politics beyond their well-known relation...
The contemporary idea that a parliament acts as a mirror of voter’s party preferences is historicall...