The case for supermajority requirements in referendums

Referendums appear to be the most majoritarian of democratic processes. The simplicity and equality they offer through voting look like the essence of majoritarianism. Indeed, this simplicity and equality are often argued to be central to referendums’ appeal. This article argues that this appearance...

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Detalhes bibliográficos
Principais autores: Qvortrup, M, Trueblood, L
Formato: Journal article
Idioma:English
Publicado em: Oxford University Press 2023
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author Qvortrup, M
Trueblood, L
author_facet Qvortrup, M
Trueblood, L
author_sort Qvortrup, M
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description Referendums appear to be the most majoritarian of democratic processes. The simplicity and equality they offer through voting look like the essence of majoritarianism. Indeed, this simplicity and equality are often argued to be central to referendums’ appeal. This article argues that this appearance of majoritarianism is misleading. Paradoxically, without supermajority requirements, binding referendums on constitutional issues cannot offer the simplicity and equality majoritarianism requires. This article identifies three different types of majority requirements and where and when these requirements are used worldwide. It then demonstrates why, at least for binding referendums on constitutional questions, special majority requirements are necessary to maintain the principles of majoritarianism. It shows that there is always a case for turnout thresholds in referendums and further special majority requirements depending on the context. Finally, the article argues that the case for special majority requirements can be context-dependent without collapsing into indeterminacy.
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spelling oxford-uuid:482f9d11-11cd-4f8d-a8b0-b635ad041a522023-07-20T07:32:27ZThe case for supermajority requirements in referendumsJournal articlehttp://purl.org/coar/resource_type/c_dcae04bcuuid:482f9d11-11cd-4f8d-a8b0-b635ad041a52EnglishSymplectic ElementsOxford University Press2023Qvortrup, MTrueblood, LReferendums appear to be the most majoritarian of democratic processes. The simplicity and equality they offer through voting look like the essence of majoritarianism. Indeed, this simplicity and equality are often argued to be central to referendums’ appeal. This article argues that this appearance of majoritarianism is misleading. Paradoxically, without supermajority requirements, binding referendums on constitutional issues cannot offer the simplicity and equality majoritarianism requires. This article identifies three different types of majority requirements and where and when these requirements are used worldwide. It then demonstrates why, at least for binding referendums on constitutional questions, special majority requirements are necessary to maintain the principles of majoritarianism. It shows that there is always a case for turnout thresholds in referendums and further special majority requirements depending on the context. Finally, the article argues that the case for special majority requirements can be context-dependent without collapsing into indeterminacy.
spellingShingle Qvortrup, M
Trueblood, L
The case for supermajority requirements in referendums
title The case for supermajority requirements in referendums
title_full The case for supermajority requirements in referendums
title_fullStr The case for supermajority requirements in referendums
title_full_unstemmed The case for supermajority requirements in referendums
title_short The case for supermajority requirements in referendums
title_sort case for supermajority requirements in referendums
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