ABSTRACT

This book provides a concise and accessible account of the historical experience of European parliaments – why different electoral systems were adopted, how they have functioned, how they have affected the development of political parties, and in what respects they have been found over time to be either suitable or unsatisfactory. The book begins with a summary of the main electoral systems, analysing and re-assessing each in the light of historical experience. The core of the book, however, is a country-by-country account of the systems which have operated in each of the main West European countries, in the context of their own constitutional, political and social developments.

chapter |6 pages

Introduction

part |40 pages

Electoral Systems

part |25 pages

Belgium and the Netherlands

chapter |11 pages

Belgium

chapter |12 pages

The Netherlands

part |48 pages

The Nordic Countries

chapter |12 pages

Denmark

chapter |11 pages

Norway

chapter |12 pages

Sweden

chapter |11 pages

Finland

part |26 pages

Austria and Switzerland

chapter |12 pages

Austria

chapter |12 pages

Switzerland

part |40 pages

The Great Powers on the Continent

chapter |13 pages

Italy

chapter |13 pages

The Federal German Republic

chapter |12 pages

France

part |26 pages

The United Kingdom and Ireland

chapter |12 pages

The United Kingdom

chapter |12 pages

The Republic of Ireland