Centripetal and Centrifugal Incentives in Electoral Systems

This paper investigates how electoral laws affect the position-taking incentives of parties and candidates. It seeks to extend the finding presented in the classical "median voter theorem" to a wide class of electoral systems--or to show the limits of such extension. The factors examined a...

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Veröffentlicht in:American journal of political science 1990-11, Vol.34 (4), p.903-935
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description This paper investigates how electoral laws affect the position-taking incentives of parties and candidates. It seeks to extend the finding presented in the classical "median voter theorem" to a wide class of electoral systems--or to show the limits of such extension. The factors examined are the district magnitude, the electoral formula, the number of votes each voter is allowed to cast, whether voters can cumulate their votes, and whether voters can "partially abstain." I suggest a crude division of electoral systems into those producing predominantly centripetal incentives and those producing predominantly centrifugal incentives. Among the factors found to produce centripetal incentives, at least in noncumulative systems, are the following: increases in the number of votes per voter; outlawry of "partial abstention"; and decreases in the district magnitude. In systems allowing the cumulation of votes, matters are a bit different.
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It seeks to extend the finding presented in the classical "median voter theorem" to a wide class of electoral systems--or to show the limits of such extension. The factors examined are the district magnitude, the electoral formula, the number of votes each voter is allowed to cast, whether voters can cumulate their votes, and whether voters can "partially abstain." I suggest a crude division of electoral systems into those producing predominantly centripetal incentives and those producing predominantly centrifugal incentives. Among the factors found to produce centripetal incentives, at least in noncumulative systems, are the following: increases in the number of votes per voter; outlawry of "partial abstention"; and decreases in the district magnitude. In systems allowing the cumulation of votes, matters are a bit different.</abstract><cop>Austin, Tex</cop><pub>University of Texas Press</pub><doi>10.2307/2111465</doi><tpages>33</tpages></addata></record>
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source Jstor Complete Legacy; Worldwide Political Science Abstracts; Periodicals Index Online
subjects Bloc voting
Candidate
Cumulative voting
ELECTION
Elections
Electoral Process
ELECTORAL SYSTEM
Electoral systems
Incentives
Law
Median voter model
Nash equilibrium
Plurality voting
POLITICAL AND POWER PROCESS
POLITICAL BEHAVIOR
Political candidates
Political Parties
POLITICAL SCIENCE
Social research
VOTING
Voting paradox
title Centripetal and Centrifugal Incentives in Electoral Systems
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