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Local elections are an increasingly popular area of research among
scholars of Canadian political behaviour, offering invaluable
insights into the attitudes and motivations of Canadian electors.
The Canadian Municipal Election Study (CMES) has collected
unparalleled individual-level survey data in eight major Canadian
municipal elections: Vancouver, Calgary, Winnipeg, London,
Mississauga, Toronto, Montreal, and Quebec City. These elections,
which took place in 2017 and 2018, were high-profile, contentious,
and often surprising, featuring mayoral defeats, record-breaking
turnouts, provincial-municipal tensions, and the first
ranked-ballot election in Canada in decades. Combining
unprecedented individual-level survey data from the CMES with local
expertise from political scientists across Canada, Big City
Elections in Canada provides a data-driven overview of each
election, while also highlighting the more general lessons the
elections teach us about municipal politics and voting behaviour.
The chapters in this book make substantial empirical and
theoretical contributions to the voting behaviour and urban
political science subfields and will appeal to students,
journalists, and engaged citizens who are interested in learning
more about municipal elections in their cities.
Local elections are an increasingly popular area of research among
scholars of Canadian political behaviour, offering invaluable
insights into the attitudes and motivations of Canadian electors.
The Canadian Municipal Election Study (CMES) has collected
unparalleled individual-level survey data in eight major Canadian
municipal elections: Vancouver, Calgary, Winnipeg, London,
Mississauga, Toronto, Montreal, and Quebec City. These elections,
which took place in 2017 and 2018, were high-profile, contentious,
and often surprising, featuring mayoral defeats, record-breaking
turnouts, provincial-municipal tensions, and the first
ranked-ballot election in Canada in decades. Combining
unprecedented individual-level survey data from the CMES with local
expertise from political scientists across Canada, Big City
Elections in Canada provides a data-driven overview of each
election, while also highlighting the more general lessons the
elections teach us about municipal politics and voting behaviour.
The chapters in this book make substantial empirical and
theoretical contributions to the voting behaviour and urban
political science subfields and will appeal to students,
journalists, and engaged citizens who are interested in learning
more about municipal elections in their cities.
Everywhere we turn in Canadian local politics - from policing to
transit, education to public health, planning to utilities - we
encounter a peculiar institutional animal: the special purpose
body. These "ABCs" of local government - library boards, school
boards, transit authorities, and many others - provide vital public
services, spend large sums of public money, and raise important
questions about local democratic accountability. In Fields of
Authority, Jack Lucas provides the first systematic exploration of
local special purpose bodies in Ontario. Drawing on extensive
research in local and provincial archives, Lucas uses a "policy
fields" approach to explain how these local bodies in Ontario have
developed from the nineteenth century to the present. A lively and
accessible study, Fields of Authority will appeal to readers
interested in Canadian political history, urban politics, and urban
public policy.
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