Hostname: page-component-848d4c4894-p2v8j Total loading time: 0.001 Render date: 2024-06-04T07:47:56.724Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

IL NUOVO SISTEMA ELETTORALE ITALIANO: QUALI OPPORTUNITÀ?

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  17 July 2018

Introduzione

Core share and HTML view are not available for this content. However, as you have access to this content, a full PDF is available via the ‘Save PDF’ action button.

Il sistema elettorale è un complesso di regole che governano la traduzione delle preferenze in voti e dei voti in seggi (Rae 1971, 14) e, in quanto tale, costituisce al contempo un vincolo ed una risorsa per tutti coloro - elettori, partiti, candidati - i quali, a vario titolo, concorrono a determinare la rappresentanza politica. In altre parole, esso contribuisce a modellare la struttura delle opportunità di quegli attori, il tipo di competizione che prevale a livello del sistema partitico e, in certi casi, l'espressione stessa delle preferenze elettorali.

Summary

Summary

The essay examines the new electoral system introduced in Italy for the elections of the House of Deputies and the Senate. The goal is to describe the main features of the system and to identify the range of behavioral choices it offers voters, candidates and parties. The system is a mix between plurality and proportional representation: 75% of the seats, both in the House and the Senate, will be assigned with the former rule and the rest will be allocated proportionally. However, the two electoral formulas are not applied independently of each other, but there are instead a number of linkages between the two levels (particularly for the House). These linkages offer incentives to all actors in the game for calculating their optimal strategies. The paper aims at analyzing these strategic choices and the impact they might have on the structure of competition and the overall effects of the system. The paper focuses particularly on the new system for the House, given its greater complexity. The specific differences between the House and the Senate are treated in a separate section.

Type
NOTE
Copyright
Copyright © Societ Italiana di Scienza Politica 

References

Riferimenti bibliografici

Blais, A. (1988), The Classification of Electoral Systems, in ‘European Journal of Political Research’, XVI, pp. 99109.Google Scholar
D'Alimonte, R. (1989), Democrazia e competizione, in ‘Rivista Italiana di Scienza Politica’, XIX, pp. 301319.Google Scholar
Farquharson, R. (1969), Theory of Voting, New Haven, Yale University Press.Google Scholar
Fisichella, D. (1970), Sviluppo democratico e sistemi elettorali, Firenze, Sansoni.Google Scholar
Nohlen, D. (1989), Changes and Choices in Electoral Systems, in Lijphart, A., Grofman, B. (a cura di), Choosing an Electoral System: Issues and Alternatives, New York, Praeger, pp. 217224.Google Scholar
Rae, D.W. (1971), The Political Consequences of Electoral Laws, New Haven, Yale University Press.Google Scholar
Reeve, A. e Ware, A. (1992), Electoral Systems. A Comparative and Theoretical Introduction, London, Routledge.Google Scholar
Sartori, G. (1968), Political Development and Political Engineering, in ‘Public Policy’, vol. XVII; trad. it. Ingegneria politica e sistemi elettorali, in G. Sartori, Teoria dei partiti e caso italiano, Milano, Sugarco, 1982, pp. 97128.Google Scholar
Taagepera, R. e Shugart, M.S. (1989), Seats & Votes. The Effects and Determinants of Electoral System, New Haven and London, Yale University Press.Google Scholar