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On the Justifiability of Compulsory Voting: Reply to Lever

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  29 July 2010

Abstract

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Notes and Comments
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Copyright © Cambridge University Press 2010

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References

1 Lever, Annabelle, ‘Compulsory Voting: A Critical Perspective’, British Journal of Political Science, 40 (2010), 897–915, pp. 900–901, 908–910, 910–12CrossRefGoogle Scholar

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4 Fox, Ruth, Kalitowski, Susanna, Korris, Matt and Atkins, Nicola, The Audit of Political Engagement 6: The 2009 Report (London: Hansard Society, 2009), pp. 1920Google Scholar; Keaney, Emily and Rogers, Ben, A Citizen’s Duty: Voter Inequality and the Case for Compulsory Voting (London: Institute for Public Policy Research, 2006), p. 5Google Scholar. http://www.ippr.org.

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7 This provokes questions: What are the constitutive features of a democracy? How are democratic institutions justified? Since ‘political equality’ is an ‘intrinsic value’ of democracy ( Weale, Albert, Democracy (London: Macmillan, 1999), p. 42CrossRefGoogle Scholar), then the undisputed capacity of compulsory voting to serve this value in terms of election turnout provides a powerful justification for compelling people to vote.

8 Louth, Jonathon and Hill, Lisa, ‘Compulsory Voting in Australia: Turnout With and Without It’, Australian Review of Public Affairs, 6 (2005), 2537Google Scholar.

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19 These findings tend to contradict Lever’s imputation that compulsory voting achieves ‘nothing more than raise turnout’, if that. See Chong, Alberto and Olivera, Mauricio, ‘On Compulsory Voting and Income Inequality in a Cross-Section of Countries’, Working Paper No. 533 (Washington, D.C.: Inter-American Development Bank Research Department, 2005)Google Scholar; and also Mueller, Dennis C. and Stratmann, Thomas, ‘The Economic Effects of Democratic Participation’, Journal of Public Economics, 87 (2003), 21292155CrossRefGoogle Scholar.

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31 Anonymous, ‘The Case for Compulsory Voting in the United States’, Harvard Law Review, 121 (2007), 591612Google Scholar, p. 599; Fellman, David, The Defendant’s Rights Today (Madison: University of Wisconsin Press, 1976), p. 182Google Scholar.

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