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World Affairs Online
Point of departure? the Blake report on electoral reform [report of the Hansard society commission on electoral reform]
In: Government & opposition: an international journal of comparative politics, Band 12, S. 42-59
ISSN: 0017-257X
NEW FEATURES IN LEGISLATION ON ELECTIONS TO THE USSR SUPREME SOVIET
In: Soviet law and government: translations from original Soviet sources, Band 18, Heft 2, S. 20-26
ISSN: 0038-5530
ARTICLE REVIEWS AND DISCUSSES THE NEW SOVIET LAW ON ELECTIONS TO THE USSR SUPREME SOVIET, REFLECTING BASIC PRINCIPLES OF THE SOVIET ELECTORAL SYSTEM ESTABLISHED IN THE USSR CONSTITUTION. NORMS REGULATING THE PROCEDURES FOR ESTABLISHING ELECTION DISTRICTS AND PRECINCTS, ELECTION COMMISSIONS, CANDIDATE NOMINATIONS, AND DETERMINATION OF ELECTIONS RESULTS ARE DISCUSSED.
Attorney-General v. Godfrey Katondwaki
In: International law reports, Band 51, S. 1-10
ISSN: 2633-707X
International law in general — Relation to municipal law — Necessity for incorporation into municipal law — Whether publication in Legal Supplement to Gazette constitutes incorporation — British Crown's jurisdiction over protectorate — Validity after independence of appointment of Electoral Boundary Commissioner during protectorate — The law of Uganda
BANGLADESH 1979: CRY FOR A SOVEREIGN PARLIAMENT
In: Asian survey: a bimonthly review of contemporary Asian affairs, Band 20, Heft 2, S. 217-230
ISSN: 0004-4687
THE ROLE OF A DIRECTLY ELECTED EUROPEAN PARLIAMENT
In: The world today, Band 33, Heft 4, S. 122-130
ISSN: 0043-9134
THIS ARTICLE CONSIDERS THE CHANGES IN THE ROLE OF THE EUROPEAN PARLIAMENT WHICH ARE LIKELY TO OCCUR WHEN THE MEMBERS OF TEH MEMBERS OF THE PARLIAMENT ARE DIRECTLY ELECTED FOR THE FIRST TIME IN 1978. ALTHOUGH PALMER FORESEES THE COMMISSION REMAINING THE PRIMARY INITIATOR OF POLICY, HE DOES SEE SOME INCREASED POLICY ROLE FOR THE PARLIAMENT AS FAIRLY LIKELY.
The 1953 Bundestag election: Evidence from West German public opinion ; Die Bundestagswahl 1953: Ergebnisse der westdeutschen Meinungsforschung
Der Verfasser untersucht die Gültigkeit ausgewählter Interpretationen zur Erklärung der Bundestagswahlergebnisse des Jahres 1953. Er konfrontiert die einzelnen Interpretationen mit Datenmaterial aus Meinungsumfragen des amerikanischen Hohen Kommissars für Deutschland zu Aspekten der bundesdeutschen Nachkriegspolitik. Der Autor kommt zu den Ergebnissen, daß der Wahlausgang und die Akzeptanz der bundesdeutschen Bevölkerung gegenüber demokratischen Institutionen und dem demokratischen System nach Auswertung des Datenmaterials nicht überrascht. Während die Identifikation mit den politischen Parteien eine untergeordnete Rolle gespielt habe, seien die von Adenauer vertretenen Standpunkte sowie dessen Persönlichkeit ausschlaggebend für den Wahlausgang gewesen. Haben sich Religionszugehörigkeit und soziale Herkunft als bedeutende Determinanten des Wahlverhaltens erwiesen, so läßt nach Ansicht des Autors eine fehlende theoretische Fundierung hingegen Rückschlüsse über ihren Stellenwert verglichen mit anderen Determinanten nicht zu. ; The 1953 Bundestag election is frequently interpreted as a critical milestone in postwar West Germany's political history. Some saw its outcome, which gave Chancellor Adenauer's CDU/CSU 45.2% for the vote (31.0% in 1949) and his coalition 63.8% (and a constitution-changing 68.4% of Bundestag seats), as a major surprise, as proof that west Germans had firmly accepted democacy, or as simply another election, to be explained by the appeal of political issues, party identification, the candidates personalities, special political circumstances (e.g. U.S. intervention), or the sociological characteristics of the voters themselves. The paper looks into the validity of a particular set of public opinion surveys on the 1953 Bundestag election, commissioned by the Evaluation Staff of the Office of Public Affairs, U.S. High Commission for Germany (HICOG). The data from the 1953 election study show that neither the electoral outcome nor the degree of West Germans' acceptance of democratic institutions and practices should have come as a surprise. Specific issues seemed to play little role, but differences in general mood, related to several such issues, were important. Party identification as such was important for only a few. Voters subsequently saw Adenauer's personality and the general mood he represented as the most important element in the outcome; the special circumstances mentioned by several writers were insignificant in the voters' consciousness. The data suggest that social class and religion were important variables determining voters' predispositions, but the lack of theoretic orientation in the study makes impossible any definite conclusion about their weight vis-a-vis other variables such as issues.
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Book Reviews
In: The Australian journal of politics and history: AJPH, Band 24, Heft 3, S. 409-448
ISSN: 1467-8497
Book reviewed in this article:THE ENGLISH FACE OF GRAMSCI: by Mark FrancisGRAMSCI. By James Joll.ANTONIO GRAMSCI: Towards an fntellectual Biography. By Alastair Davidson.ANTONIO GRAMSCI AND THE REVOLUTION THAT FAILED. By Martin Clark.MEDIATOR: A Biography of Sir Richard Kirby. By Blanche d'Alpuget.SOCIALISM WITHOUT DOCTRINE. By Albert Metin, translated by Russel Ward, with a Foreword by Don AitkinAUSTRALIANS IN AMERICA: 1876–1976. Edited by John Hammond Morre.JOHN CURTIN: A Biography. By Lloyd RossTHE NEW GOLD MOUNTAIN: The Chinese in Australia 1901–1921. By C.F. Yong.PATRICIAN DEMOCRAT: The Political Life of Charles Cowper 1843–1870. By Alan Powell.THE EMERGENCE OF THE AUSTRALIAN PARTY SYSTEM. Edited by P. Loveday, A.W. Martin and R.S. Parker.THE POLITICS OF AUSTRALIAN DEMOCRACY: Fundamentals in Dispute. Second Edition. By Hugh V. Emy.AUSTRALIANS AT THE BOER WAR. By R.L. Wallace.TOWARDS A MULTI‐CULTURAL TASMANIA: Report of a Conference. June 25, 1977. Edited by William W. Bostock.LABOUR IN CONFLICT: The 1949 Coal Strike. Edited by Phillip Deery.JOH: The Life and Political Adventures of Johannes Bjelke‐Petersen. By Hugh Lunn.QUEENSLAND POLITICAL PORTRAITS 1859–1952. Edited by D.J. Murphy and R.B. Joyce.THE MUNGANA AFFAIR: State Mining and Political Corruption in the 1920s. By K.H. Kennedy.A FAIR PRICE: The Land Commission Program 1972–1977. By P.N. Troy.JACK LANG. Edited by Heather Radi and Peter SpearittTHE NEW ZEALAND GENERAL ELECTION OF 1975. By Stephen Levine and Juliet Lodge.THE NEW ZEALAND VOTER: A Survey of Public Opinion and Electoral Behaviour. By Stephen Levine and Alan Robinson.GRASS HUTS AND WAREHOUSES: Pacific Beach Communities of the Nineteenth Century. By Caroline Ralston.GODS GENTLEMEN: A History of the Melanesian Mission 1849–1942. By David Hilliard.EAST TIMOR: Nationalism and Colonialism. By Jill Jolliffe.AWAKENING CONTINENT. THE LIFE OF LORD MOUNT STEPHEN. Volume I:1829–91. THE END OF THE ROAD. THE LIFE OF LORD MOUNT STEPHEN. Volume II: 1891–1921. By Heather Gilbert.SOCIALISM IN CANADA: A Study of the CCF‐NDP in Federal and Provincial Politics. By Ivan Avakumovic.JAPANESE INTERNATIONAL NEGOTIATING STYLE. By Michael Blaker.CONTEMPORARY CHINA. By Bill Brugger.SOUTHEAST ASIA IN INTERNATIONAL POLITICS, 1941–1956. By Evelyn Colbert.MAO TSE‐TUNG IN THE SCALES OF HISTORY: A Preliminary Assessment. Edited by Dick Wilson.THE POLITICS OF THE ITALIAN ARMY 1861–1918. By John Whittam.ADJUTANT IM PREUSSISCHEN KRIEGSMINISTERIUM JUNI 1918 BIS OKTOBER 1919: Aufzeichungen des Hauptmanns Gustav Böhm.NAZI YOUTH IN THE WEIMAR REPUBLIC. By Perer D. Stachura.THE POLITICS OF SOUTH AFRICA: Democracy and Racial Diversity. By Howard Brotz.THE AFRICAN LINK: British Attitudes to the Negro in the Era of the Atlantic Slave Trade, 1550–1807. By Anthony J. Barker.THE HISTORY AND PRACTICE OF THE POLITICAL POLICE IN BRITAIN. By Tony Bunyan.ALL ABOUT CITIZENS' RIGHTS. By Ken Buckley.THE VICTORIAN FAMILY: Structure and Stresses. Edited by Anthony S. WohlTHE VICTORIAN ARMY AT HOME: The Recruitment and Terms and Conditions of the British Regular, 1859–1899, By Alan Ramsay SkelleyCRIME AND AUTHORITY IN VICTORIAN ENGLAND: The Black Country 1835–1860. By David Philips.THE BREAKDOWN OF PUBLIC SECURITY: The Case of Ireland 1916–1921 and Palestine 1936–1939. By Tom Bowden.FOREIGN AFFAIRS FOR NEW STATES: Some Questions of Credentials. By P.J. Boyce.THE DIPLOMACY OF DETENTE: The Kissinger Era. By Coral Bell.SUPPLYING WAR: Logistics from Wallenstein to Patton. By Martin van Creveld.THE IMPACT OF THE COLD WAR: Reconsiderations. Edited by Joseph M. Siracusa and Glen St. John Barclay.THE COMPARATIVE STUDY OF REVOLUTIONARY STRATEGY. By Mostafa Rejai.NOTES OF A NON‐CONSPIRATOR. By Efim Etkind.THE NATIONAL QUESTION: Selected Writings by Rosa Luxembourg. Edited by Horace B. Davis.SOCIALISM AND THE NEW CLASS: Towards the Analysis of Structural Inequality Within Socialist Societies. Edited by Marian Sawer.THE ANARCHIST READER. Edited by George Woodcock.SOCIAL CHANGE, POLITICAL CHANGE, AND PUBLIC POLICY: Norway and Sweden, 1875–1965. By David Klingman.POLITICAL DEVELOPMENT AND ELITE TRANSFORMATION IN DENMARK. By Mogens N. Pedersen.THE 'NEW CORPORATISM', CENTRALIZATION, AND THE WELFARE STATE. By Harold L. Wilensky.MAX WEBER: Selections in Translation. Edited by W.G. Runciman. Translated by Eric Matthew.THE PASSIONS AND THE INTERESTS: Political Arguments for Capitalism before Its Triumph. By Albert O. Hirschman.JOHN STUART MILL. By R.J. Halliday.BEYOND INTELLECTUAL SEXISM: A New Woman, A New Reality. Edited by Joan I. Roberts.A HISTORY OF THE BOLIVIAN LABOUR MOVEMENT. By Guillermo Lora.