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Choosing an Electoral System

In: Comparative Constitutional Engineering

Author

Listed:
  • Giovanni Sartori

    (Columbia University)

Abstract

As regards the translation between votes and seats electoral systems can be considered continuous, since the major variable is here the constituency size, and given the fact that sizes that range continuously (serially) from 1 to about 40–50 all exist in some country or another. But as regards their ends and their underlying reason for being, I insist that electoral systems must be neatly disjoined into majoritarian and proportional. The alternative may be stated as follows: ‘Representational systems belong to two main patterns ... The English type sacrifices the representativeness of parliament to the need of efficient government, while the French type sacrifices efficient government to the representativeness of parliament... [And] we cannot build a representational system that maximizes at one and the same time the function of functioning and the function of mirroring.’1

Suggested Citation

  • Giovanni Sartori, 1994. "Choosing an Electoral System," International Economic Association Series, in: Comparative Constitutional Engineering, chapter 4, pages 53-79, Palgrave Macmillan.
  • Handle: RePEc:pal:intecp:978-1-349-22861-4_4
    DOI: 10.1007/978-1-349-22861-4_4
    as

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