Are mixed electoral systems still "the best of both worlds"? The review of public choice special issue: Mixed electoral systems Cover Image

Are mixed electoral systems still "the best of both worlds"? The review of public choice special issue: Mixed electoral systems
Are mixed electoral systems still "the best of both worlds"? The review of public choice special issue: Mixed electoral systems

Author(s): Jeremiasz Salamon, Peyton Howard
Subject(s): Electoral systems, Political behavior, History and theory of political science, Comparative politics
Published by: Akademia Leona Koźmińskiego
Keywords: mixed electoral systems; electoral reform; strategic voting; party strategies; public choice;

Summary/Abstract: By all accounts, the development and implementation of mixed electoral systems is an ongoing process. We continue to learn from theory and practice regarding fundamental tenets of these systems as well as contextual idiosyncrasies of their use with various countries' electorates. It remains uncontroversial whether trade-offs exist, but determining priority features has attracted considerable attention in both policy and academic circles. Moreover, exactly what trade-offs will be most potent within the complexity of real elections is often less than apparent. Thus, iteration and reform have been central to the development of these systems towards their promised paradigm. This review of the Public Choice Special Issue: Mixed Electoral Systems (Vol. 204, Issue 1-2) provides an overview of what we have learned to date about the promises and pitfalls of mixed electoral systems through historical analysis of hybrid systems, case studies of modern mixed electoral systems, statistical and formal theoretical analysis of features of mixed electoral systems, and, finally, proposed reforms of mixed electoral systems.

  • Issue Year: 37/2025
  • Issue No: 2
  • Page Range: 21-45
  • Page Count: 25
  • Language: English
Toggle Accessibility Mode