Voter Turnout in Politically Homogeneous and Dichotomous Contexts: A Comparison of Two Electoral Systems
In: Electoral Studies, Band 23, Heft 3, S. 501-524
Abstract
The article analyses the impact of the local political context on voter turnout. Two specific situations are studied, ie, contexts where one political party dominates & contexts where the political support is evenly split between two large parties. Voter turnout in these two constellations is compared with communities where the vote is fragmented between several parties. Moreover, the electoral system is treated as an intervening variable & two countries with different electoral systems are included in the study. All democratic parliamentary elections in Finland (PR) & Great Britain (FPTP) are studied. Thus, the time span covers eight decades from 1918 to 2001. The theoretical approach model is based on hypotheses of social gravity & cross-pressures. It is established that the local political context affects voter turnout clearly in the plurality system, whereas the effects in the proportional system are less apparent. 2 Tables, 3 Figures, 5 Appendixes, 78 References. [Copyright 2003 Elsevier Ltd.]
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