Despite the substantial body of research on compulsory voting's (CV) relationship with turnout, much remains unknown about the role of different types of CV rules, their enforcement, and their ability to prevent the secular turnout decline observed around the world. Moreover, existing studies that leverage changes to CV laws are limited to a single country. We assemble rich new data on voter turnout and electoral legislation that, we believe, include the most accurate and extensive cross-national measure of CV to date. We test three theoretically derived hypotheses: that CV enforcement matters for participation; that enforcement's effect is conditioned by state capacity; and that, only when CV is enforced, will it mitigate voter turnout's p...
Full participation is the first book-length study of compulsory voting to be published in the Englis...
America’s turnout problem is among the worst of any of the established democracies. Even a reform as...
Citizens unequally participate in referendums, and this may systematically bias policy in favor of t...
Published online: 25 November 2022Despite the substantial body of research on compulsory voting’s (...
Voter turnout levels have been steadily declining in the whole of the world’s democracies, for the l...
Electoral turnout in UK elections has been disappointing over recent cycles, despite a small uptick ...
Can electoral institutions induce lasting changes in citizens’ voting habits? We study the long-term...
As voter turnout is steadily declining in Western democracies, various authors have expressed concer...
Over the past few decades, falling voter turnout rates have induced governments to adopt compulsory ...
This paper addresses some residual misunderstandings about the effects of compulsory voting and, in ...
Political theorists have argued that democracies should strive for high turnout,leading a number of ...
Political theorists have argued that democracies should strive for high turnout, leading to an argum...
© 2018 Springer Science+Business Media, LLC, part of Springer Nature Political theorists have argued...
We study a unique quasi-experiment in Austria, where compulsory voting laws are changed across Austr...
One of the most robust findings on political institutions is that compulsory voting (CV) reduces the...
Full participation is the first book-length study of compulsory voting to be published in the Englis...
America’s turnout problem is among the worst of any of the established democracies. Even a reform as...
Citizens unequally participate in referendums, and this may systematically bias policy in favor of t...
Published online: 25 November 2022Despite the substantial body of research on compulsory voting’s (...
Voter turnout levels have been steadily declining in the whole of the world’s democracies, for the l...
Electoral turnout in UK elections has been disappointing over recent cycles, despite a small uptick ...
Can electoral institutions induce lasting changes in citizens’ voting habits? We study the long-term...
As voter turnout is steadily declining in Western democracies, various authors have expressed concer...
Over the past few decades, falling voter turnout rates have induced governments to adopt compulsory ...
This paper addresses some residual misunderstandings about the effects of compulsory voting and, in ...
Political theorists have argued that democracies should strive for high turnout,leading a number of ...
Political theorists have argued that democracies should strive for high turnout, leading to an argum...
© 2018 Springer Science+Business Media, LLC, part of Springer Nature Political theorists have argued...
We study a unique quasi-experiment in Austria, where compulsory voting laws are changed across Austr...
One of the most robust findings on political institutions is that compulsory voting (CV) reduces the...
Full participation is the first book-length study of compulsory voting to be published in the Englis...
America’s turnout problem is among the worst of any of the established democracies. Even a reform as...
Citizens unequally participate in referendums, and this may systematically bias policy in favor of t...