Democracy and the Politics of Electoral System Choice: Engineering Electoral Dominance
Cambridge University Press, 11/22/2012
EAN 9781107031616, ISBN10: 1107031613
Hardcover, 242 pages, 22.8 x 15.2 x 1.4 cm
Language: English
Amel Ahmed brings new historical evidence and a novel theoretical framework to bear on the study of democratization. Looking at the politics of electoral system choice at the time of suffrage expansion among early democratizers, she shows that the electoral systems used in advanced democracies today were initially devised as exclusionary safeguards to protect pre-democratic elites from the impact of democratization and, particularly, the existential threat posed by working-class mobilization. The ubiquitous use and enduring nature of these safeguards calls into question the familiar picture of democracy moving along a path of increasing inclusiveness. Instead, what emerges is a picture that is riddled with ambiguity, where inclusionary democratic reforms combine with exclusionary electoral safeguards to form a permanent part of the new democratic order. This book has important implications for our understanding of the dynamics of democratic development both in early democracies and in emerging democracies today.
1. Introduction
contradictions and ambiguities of democratization
2. Strategies of containment
the role of repression and accommodation
3. Strategies of competition
the logic of electoral system choice, single member plurality (SMP) vs. proportional representation (PR)
4. The United States
pre-industrial democratization and the origins of SMP
5. The United Kingdom
safeguarding the Reform Acts with SMP
6. France
the tumultuous path of electoral system choice in the Third Republic
7. Belgium
minimizing the existential threat with PR
8. Conclusions
rethinking democracy's determinisms
Appendix
the existential threat - electoral viability and ideological radicalism.