Voting in New Zealand local government elections: the need to encourage greater voter turnout

IF 0.5 Q4 PUBLIC ADMINISTRATION Commonwealth Journal of Local Governance Pub Date : 2021-06-28 DOI:10.5130/cjlg.vi24.7541
Andy Asquith, K. Webster, Andrew Cardow
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Abstract

Within a global context, local government in New Zealand occupies an enviable position: it enjoys both a statutorily-defined ‘power of general competence’ and financial autonomy from central government. However, despite this, voter turnout rates in New Zealand local elections continue to fall as ever fewer New Zealanders engage in this fundamental act of civic engagement. This review article examines the decline in voting over the last four New Zealand local government elections (2010/13/16/19). It aims to do three things: plot the decline; identify and analyse the causes of this decline; and suggest ways in which the decline might be countered. The authors reach the conclusion that local government in New Zealand is at a crossroads – it will either be rejuvenated as a source of local democracy and prosper, or decline into an administrative arm of central government.
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新西兰地方政府选举中的投票:需要鼓励更多的选民参与
在全球范围内,新西兰地方政府占据着令人羡慕的地位:它既享有法律规定的“一般权限”,又享有中央政府的财政自主权。然而,尽管如此,新西兰地方选举的选民投票率仍在下降,因为参与这一基本公民参与行为的新西兰人越来越少。这篇综述文章考察了过去四次新西兰地方政府选举(2010/13/16/19)中投票率的下降。它的目标是做三件事:策划衰落;查明和分析这种下降的原因;并提出应对衰退的方法。作者得出的结论是,新西兰地方政府正处于十字路口——它要么将作为地方民主的源泉而复兴并繁荣,要么将衰落为中央政府的行政部门。
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来源期刊
自引率
20.00%
发文量
10
审稿时长
24 weeks
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