Content Categorized with "Middle East and Africa"
51 - 60 of 60 results
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Iraqi provincial elections showcase how the U.S. supports proportional representation...
- Posted: February 1, 2009
- Author(s): Rob Richie
- Categories: Middle East and Africa, Elections Worldwide
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Fatah calls for proportional voting in Palestine
- Posted: June 22, 2007
- Author(s): Jack Santucci
- Categories: Fair Voting/Proportional Representation, Middle East and Africa, Elections Worldwide
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Turkey, women and PR lists
- Posted: June 6, 2007
- Author(s): Jack Santucci
- Categories: Middle East and Africa, Elections Worldwide
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Palestine: Voting system would overrepresent Hamas - again
- Posted: May 10, 2006
- Author(s): Jack Santucci
- Categories: Middle East and Africa, Elections Worldwide
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International Snapshot: Israel 2006
- Posted: April 5, 2006
- Author(s): Ryan Griffin, Research Fellow
- Categories: Middle East and Africa, Research & Analysis, International Elections, FairVote, All Reports
Israel held elections to its parliament, the Knesset, on March 28, 2006. Frequently held up as an example of why not to adopt proportional voting, Israel's election system, critics argue, tends to produce unstable, unworkable governing coalitions. But this tendency has less to do with proportional voting than the form Israel has chosen to use, in tandem with its wider political environment. This report focuses on the effects of Israel's low electoral threshold and closed party list system.
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Hamas' victory: It's the election system, stupid
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International Snapshot: Palestine 2006
- Posted: February 1, 2006
- Author(s): Ryan Griffin and Jack Santucci
- Categories: Middle East and Africa, Research & Analysis, International Elections, FairVote, Elections Worldwide, All Reports
Palestine held elections to its Legislative Council on January 25, 2006. In that vote, Change and Reform (Hamas) took power away from the governing Fatah movement, winning 75 of 132 seats. Some commentators declared this a sweeping mandate for Hamas, speculating especially on what the power shift means for Israeli-Palestinian relations, but the election results are not an accurate reflection of popular opinion. Instead, the election system itself is at least as important as popular opinion in determining the makeup of the Council.
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International Snapshot: Iraq 2005
- Posted: December 20, 2005
- Author(s): David Moon
- Categories: Middle East and Africa, Research & Analysis, International Elections, FairVote, All Reports
Iraq's December 2005 parliamentary elections were contested by 230 parties and 21 coalitions, all vying for seats in the first full-term, four-year parliament since the beginning of the 2003 war in Iraq. Authorities conducted the election using a new proportional voting system in which parties fielded candidates for parliament in each of Iraq’s 18 provinces under 18 different ballots using regional party lists. Additionally, the parliament consists of 275 seats, with 45 elected as "compensatory seats" to parties that did not win seats under the regional list elections but won enough votes nationally to cross the threshold for a seat at the national level.
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Reforms help drive Iraq vote turnout to 70 percent
- Posted: December 19, 2005
- Author(s): Jack Santucci
- Categories: Middle East and Africa, Elections Worldwide
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Upcoming Iraqi Parliamentary Elections to Use Historic Proportional Voting System
- Posted: December 12, 2005
- Author(s): Jack Santucci
- Categories: Middle East and Africa, Elections Worldwide