By-Elections, Local Elections, Euro-Elections and Referenda
In: Elections in Britain Today, S. 151-166
In: Elections in Britain Today, S. 151-166
In: Elections in Britain Today, S. 140-154
Popular, competitive elections are a component of the democratic process, but they alone do not constitute a democracy. The first somewhat competitive election in the Soviet Union in 1989 marked the beginning of a trend toward political liberalization & democracy. Since then the Russians have voted for their chosen candidates many times, although only a small percentage of the adult population participates. The elections, on all levels, have been held as prescribed by law, though the first founding election for a new political system under a new constitution did not take place until December 1993. The campaigns & outcomes of the Gorbachev, Yeltsin, & (the first) Putin elections, & the corresponding parliamentary elections, are described. Under Putin, the elections still perform a quasi-democratic function, but they are now controlled by state institutions that have the ability to falsify the outcomes in favor of Putin-supported incumbents. J. Stanton
In: Basic Geometry of Voting, S. 1-27
In: The Wiley-Blackwell Companion to Political Sociology, S. 168-179
In: Using the Internet for Political Research, S. 37-53
In: From Rhodesia to Zimbabwe, S. 121-122
In: How Ireland Voted 2007, S. 148-166
In: Parliaments and Politics during the Cromwellian Protectorate, S. 49-79