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Three unprecedented large-scale democratic experiments have
recently taken place. Citizen assemblies on electoral reform were
conducted in British Columbia, the Netherlands, and Ontario. Groups
of randomly selected ordinary citizens were asked to independently
design the next electoral system. In each case, the participants
spent almost an entire year learning about electoral systems,
consulting the public, deliberating, debating, and ultimately
deciding what specific institution should be adopted. When Citizens
Decide uses these unique cases to examine claims about citizens'
capacity for democratic deliberation and active engagement in
policy-making. It offers empirical insight into numerous debates
and provides answers to a series of key questions: 1) Are ordinary
citizens able to decide about a complex issue? Are their decisions
reasonable? 2) Who takes part in such proceedings? Are they
dominated by people dissatisfied by the status quo? 3) Do some
citizens play a more prominent role than others? Are decisions
driven by the most vocal or most informed members? 4) Did the
participants decide by themselves? Were they influenced by staff,
political parties, interest groups, or the public hearings? 5) Does
participation in a deliberative process foster citizenship? Did
participants become more trusting, tolerant, open-minded,
civic-minded, interested in politics, and active in politics? 6)
How do the other political actors react? Can the electorate accept
policy proposals made by a group of ordinary citizens? The analyses
rely upon various types of evidence about both the inner workings
of the assemblies and the reactions toward them outside: multi-wave
panel surveys of assembly members, content analysis of newspaper
coverage, and public opinion survey data. The lessons drawn from
this research are relevant to those interested in political
participation, public opinion, deliberation, public policy, and
democracy. Comparative Politics is a series for students, teachers,
and researchers of political science that deals with contemporary
government and politics. Global in scope, books in the series are
characterised by a stress on comparative analysis and strong
methodological rigour. The series is published in association with
the European Consortium for Political Research. For more
information visit: www.essex.ac.uk/ecpr. The Comparative Politics
Series is edited by Professor David M. Farrell, School of Politics
and International Relations, University College Dublin, Kenneth
Carty, Professor of Political Science, University of British
Columbia, and Professor Dirk Berg-Schlosser, Institute of Political
Science, Philipps University, Marburg.
The 1993 federal election was in many ways the strangest in
Canada's history. The results were unprecedented: the governing
party was reduced to two seats, a separatist party became the
official opposition, and a new regional party swept the West. Pivot
or Pirouette? covers both the backstory and the aftermath, arguing
that although the shocking results seemed pivotal, ultimately the
pivot turned into a full pirouette as Canadian politics returned to
historical norms. New parties shake up the system but are
eventually absorbed into it, bringing innovation but not
transformation. You can't understand modern Canadian politics
without understanding the 1993 election.
L'action des partis politiques dans les circonscriptions au Canada
Democracy thrives on vigorous competition between political
parties. However, in several established democracies one party
manages to dominate national politics for decades at a time,
seemingly creating a democratic one-party unnatural democracy. This
book examines five such countries - Canada, Ireland, India, Japan,
Italy - to understand what kind of party comes to dominate
democratic competition, and how and why they do so. In different
countries with different political challenges, an analysis of their
'Government Parties' reveals their common relationship with the
origins and operations of the states they dominate, and the nation-
and/or state-building challenges they face. Democratic dominance
cannot last forever; how a government party responds to the
seemingly inevitable decline of long-term support defines the
prospects for its unnatural democracy. Comparative Politics is a
series for researchers, teachers, and students of political science
that deals with contemporary government and politics. Global in
scope, books in the series are characterized by a stress on
comparative analysis and strong methodological rigour. The series
is published in association with the European Consortium for
Political Research. For more information visit www.ecprnet.eu The
series is edited by Susan Scarrow, John and Rebecca Moores
Professor of Political Science at the University of Houston, and
Jonathan Slapin, Professor of Political Institutions and European
Politics, Department of Political Science, University of Zurich.
Canadian party politics collapsed in the early 1990s. This book is
about that collapse, about the end of a party system, with a unique
pattern of party organization and competition, that had governed
Canada's national politics for several decades, and about the
ongoing struggle to build its successor. Rebuilding Canadian Party
Politics discusses the breakdown of the old party system, the
emergence of the Reform Party and the Bloc Quebecois, and the fate
of the Conservative and New Democratic Parties. It focuses on the
internal workings of parties in this new era, examining the role of
professionals, new technologies, and local activists. To understand
the ambiguities of our current party system, the authors attended
local and national party meetings, nomination and leadership
meetings, and campaign kick-off rallies. They visited local
campaign offices to observe the parties' grassroots operations and
conducted interviews with senior party officials, pollsters, media
and advertising specialists, and leader-tour directors. Written in
a lively and accessible style, this book will interest students of
party politics and Canadian political history, as well as general
readers eager to make sense of the changes reshaping national
politics today.
Canadian party politics collapsed in the early 1990s. This book is
about that collapse, about the end of a party system, with a unique
pattern of party organization and competition, that had governed
Canada's national politics for several decades, and about the
ongoing struggle to build its successor. Rebuilding Canadian Party
Politics discusses the breakdown of the old party system, the
emergence of the Reform Party and the Bloc Quebecois, and the fate
of the Conservative and New Democratic Parties. It focuses on the
internal workings of parties in this new era, examining the role of
professionals, new technologies, and local activists. To understand
the ambiguities of our current party system, the authors attended
local and national party meetings, nomination and leadership
meetings, and campaign kick-off rallies. They visited local
campaign offices to observe the parties' grassroots operations and
conducted interviews with senior party officials, pollsters, media
and advertising specialists, and leader-tour directors. Written in
a lively and accessible style, this book will interest students of
party politics and Canadian political history, as well as general
readers eager to make sense of the changes reshaping national
politics today.
Grassroots Politicians is the first systematic account ofparty
activists at the provincial level in Canada. To understand
thepattern of political polarization in British Columbia, the
authorsexamine the values and beliefs of those at the party cores
-- thepeople behind the party images who elect leaders, nominate
candidates,and work in electoral campaigns. In the New Democratic
Party they playa crucial role in determining policy, in the Social
Credit they help toshape party direction and governing style by
their choice of leader,and, among the Liberals, they form the small
band that keeps the partyalive in the province.
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