Use of different electoral systems in different districts
In political science, coexistence[1] involves different voters using different electoral systems depending on which electoral district they belong to.[2] This is distinct from other mixed electoral systems that use parallel voting (superposition) or compensatory voting. For example, the rural-urban proportional (RUP) proposal for British Columbia involved the use of a fully proportional system of list-PR or STV in urban regions, combined with MMP in rural regions.[3]
Coexistence of electoral systems exist in multiple countries, like the Democratic Republic of the Congo and Panama, as well as for elections of the European Parliament.[citation needed]. Historically, variants have been used in Iceland (1946–1959), Niger (1993, 1995) and Madagascar (1998).[4]
Types of coexistence
Type
|
System
|
Example(s) for use
|
Coexistence
|
e.g. FPTP/SMP in single-member districts, list-PR in multi-member districts
|
Democratic Republic of the Congo, Panama
|
Supermixed
|
e.g. FPTP/SMP in single-member districts, conditional party block voting in multi-member districts
|
Cameroon, Chad
|
Rural-urban proportional representation (RUP)
|
Denmark (formerly), Iceland (formerly)
|
Seat linkage compensatory mixed system (MMP) and FPTP in special consituencies
|
Bolivia
|
References