Non-universal suffrage : measuring electoral inclusion in contemporary democracies
Author(s)
Date issued
February 14, 2019
In
European Political Science
No
18
From page
695
To page
713
Reviewed by peer
1
Subjects
Voting rights · Candidacy rights · Citizenship · Elections · Democracy measurement · Index building
Abstract
The electoral franchise has become more universal as restrictions based on criteria such as sex or property have been lifted throughout the process of democratisation. Yet, a broad range of exclusions has persisted to this date, making the suffrage non-universal, even in established democracies. In this article, we present ELECLAW, a new set of indicators that captures the subtle and variegated legal landscape of persisting electoral rights restrictions. We measure the inclusiveness of the right to vote and the right to stand as candidate across four levels and three types of elections for three categories of voters: citizen residents, non-citizen residents, and non-resident citizens. ELECLAW currently covers fifty-one democracies in three different continents (the Americas, Europe, and Oceania) depicting the legal situation in 2015. The article introduces the methodology used for building the indicators so as to make it transparent to the broader research community. To this aim, it successively unpacks the conceptualisation underlying the indicators, explains the measurement by providing specific examples, and discusses the merits of a differentiated and context-driven method of aggregation.
Later version
https://link.springer.com/article/10.1057%2Fs41304-019-00202-8
Publication type
journal article
File(s)
