DETERMINANTS AND CONSEQUENCES OF PREFERENCE VOTING: A COMPARATIVE ANALYSIS

17 NOVEMBER | OPENING SESSION |(8:45 A.M. 9:15 A.M.)
DETERMINANTS AND CONSEQUENCES OF PREFERENCE VOTING
Fulco Lanchester, Director of the Department of Political Sciences, Professor of
Comparative Public Law, Sapienza University, Rome
Oreste Massari, professor of Political Science, Sapienza University, Rome
Stefano Ceccanti, professor of Comparative Public Law, Sapienza University
Giovanni Maria Vianello, International Office, Sapienza University Rome
Gianluca Passarelli, assistant professor of Political Science, Sapienza
University, Rome
17 NOVEMBER | SECTION 1 (9:15 A.M.1:15 P.M.)
PREFERENCE VOTING, ELECTORAL SYSTEMS AND POLITICAL PARTIES
Audrey Andr, Universiteit Antwerpen, Sam Depauw, Vrije Universiteit Brussel
The Incidence and Distribution of Preference Voting across Different Types of Elections in
Belgium
sa Bengtsson, bo Akademi University, Finland
Intra-list competition and incumbency advantage in open-list PR: The case of Finland
Daniel Bochsler, University of Zurich
Getting the constituencies right: When are mixed-member electoral systems proportional?
Roman Chytilek, Peter Spac, Masaryk University, Czech Republic
The balance of party and voter preferences in semi-open lists systems: The cases of the
Czech Republic and Slovakia
Ellis S. Krauss, University of California, San Diego
Election systems and bicameralism in Japan: why Japan is not the U.K.
Matthew S. Shugart and Christine Cahill, University of California, Davis
The Incentives (or Lack of Incentives) for MPs to Cultivate Personal Votes in Flexible List
Systems
Gianluca Passarelli, Sapienza University, Rome
Preferential voting in Italy: the worst of electoral systems? A diachronic analysis

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