This chapter presents a formal model of electoral competition where parties’ platforms are endogenously chosen and depend on the degree of the electoral rule disproportionality. We first show that proportional electoral systems generate centrifugal forces that increase candidate differentiation. This in turn implies that more proportional systems are associated with lower levels of abstention from indifference. This two-step theoretical prediction of the effect of electoral systems on turnout is then empirically validated even when we jointly control for the prevailing pivotality and party-system size hypotheses. Thus, our work highlights an additional link in the proportionality-turnout nexus
Evidence that turnout is higher under proportional representation (PR) than in majoritarian election...
World democracies widely differ in legislative, executive and legal institutions. Different institut...
Proponents of proportional electoral rules often argue that majority rule depresses turnout and may ...
In a system of proportional representation, we study the interaction between a voter’s turnout decis...
Electoral institutions shape the potential costs and benefits of participation. This chapter argues ...
World democracies widely differ in electoral rules, as well as in legislative, executive or legal in...
How does electoral rule disproportionality affect the structure of the party system (i.e. the number...
World democracies widely differ in legislative, executive, and legal institutions. Different institu...
How does electoral rule disproportionality affect the structure of the party system (i.e. the number...
Abstract. Different institutional systems determine different map-pings from election outcomes to po...
Despite what common perception dictates, theoretical literature lacks a com-plete formal argument re...
Differences in electoral rules and/or legislative, executive or legal institutions across countries ...
Empirical findings based on aggregate data have found that proportional representation (PR) has a mi...
Past research analysing the positive effects of proportional systems on electoral participation has ...
Evidence that turnout is higher under proportional representation (PR) than in majoritarian election...
Evidence that turnout is higher under proportional representation (PR) than in majoritarian election...
World democracies widely differ in legislative, executive and legal institutions. Different institut...
Proponents of proportional electoral rules often argue that majority rule depresses turnout and may ...
In a system of proportional representation, we study the interaction between a voter’s turnout decis...
Electoral institutions shape the potential costs and benefits of participation. This chapter argues ...
World democracies widely differ in electoral rules, as well as in legislative, executive or legal in...
How does electoral rule disproportionality affect the structure of the party system (i.e. the number...
World democracies widely differ in legislative, executive, and legal institutions. Different institu...
How does electoral rule disproportionality affect the structure of the party system (i.e. the number...
Abstract. Different institutional systems determine different map-pings from election outcomes to po...
Despite what common perception dictates, theoretical literature lacks a com-plete formal argument re...
Differences in electoral rules and/or legislative, executive or legal institutions across countries ...
Empirical findings based on aggregate data have found that proportional representation (PR) has a mi...
Past research analysing the positive effects of proportional systems on electoral participation has ...
Evidence that turnout is higher under proportional representation (PR) than in majoritarian election...
Evidence that turnout is higher under proportional representation (PR) than in majoritarian election...
World democracies widely differ in legislative, executive and legal institutions. Different institut...
Proponents of proportional electoral rules often argue that majority rule depresses turnout and may ...