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Electoral System
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Electoral systems are the formal rules and procedures that translate votes into political representation, making them a foundational subject in political science, comparative politics, and government courses. Students examine how different systems — such as proportional representation, first-past-the-post, and mixed models — shape party competition, voter behavior, and democratic legitimacy. The topic is academically compelling because no single system is universally adopted, and the choice of electoral design has direct consequences for political stability, minority representation, and the balance of power between established parties and emerging movements.

The papers archived on this topic reflect a genuinely wide range of approaches. Some focus on specific national or regional cases, including the Texas election system, the British electoral reform debate, and the political electoral system of Mexico, allowing for detailed institutional analysis. Others take a comparative or historical angle, examining post-war Italy, Latin American political dynamics, or democratization challenges in Iraq and Egypt. A smaller set engages normative and philosophical questions around individual rights and the conditions necessary for meaningful democratic participation, while several papers address practical political activity, including local campaigns and lobbying influence on legislation.

A strong essay on electoral systems should establish a clear, arguable thesis rather than simply describing how a given system works. Evidence drawn from specific elections, legislative outcomes, or cross-national comparisons carries the most analytical weight. Historical context strengthens arguments considerably, particularly when explaining why reforms succeed or stall. The most common pitfall is treating electoral rules as neutral technical arrangements — effective essays recognize that system design always reflects and reinforces particular political interests and power structures.

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Paper Doctorate
Political Parties and Democracy a Central Claim
A central claim of democratic theory is that democracy induces governments to be responsive to the preferences of the people. Political parties serve to organize politics in almost every modern democracy in the world (in both presidential and parliamentary systems). Some observers claim that the parties are what induce democracies to be responsive. In this essay, the author will show this point of democracy being dependent upon the buildup of democratic expression through the buildup and maintenance of organic party organizations in both presidential and parliamentary systems in democracies worldwide. This analysis excludes ethnic parties which infect the systems with instability. Rather, we will see how other institutions can be harnessed to channel these energies in more profitable directions.
Paper Doctorate
Government and policy systems for newly established countries
This assignment is about creating a scenario for forming the government of a newly independent island nation, influenced by the Spanish Empire. Deciding how to develop economically, as well as democratically, is addressed. Also, uniting the two competing ethnicities, the Indo-Europeans and the Amero-Indians, is critical to the success of the new state..
Research Paper Undergraduate
Open systems and their applications
Before making assumptions and applying critical thinking to any one of the topics from Michael Moore's book, we need to make the observation that Michael Moore's work is less a set of applicable solutions to problems…
Paper Undergraduate
Outfoxed Before Watching the Documentary
Before watching the documentary about Fox News entitled "Outfoxed," I considered myself immune to the effects of the Fox network. I assumed that if I did not watch Fox News and did not rely upon it as a source of…
Research Paper Undergraduate
Functioning of the Electoral System
¶ … Functioning of the Electoral System of South Africa
Paper Doctorate
Essay questions and study guide responses
This project consists of five short essays concerning the following topics: 1. Describe and analyze the classical theoretical model of political parties and point out the differences between this model and the two principal American political parties. 2. Explain five lessons that can be learned from a study of the history of American political parties and cite at least two elections or periods of time that illustrate each of the five lessons. 3. Write a detailed essay in which you describe and analyze the reasons that we have a two-party system in the United States. 4. Describe the changes in American social, international, domestic, and political circumstances that caused major shifts in strength from the Democratic Party to the Republican Party between 1965 and 2004. 5. Write an essay in which you describe the demographic, economic and cultural (social-technological) changes that took place in the latter half of the Nineteenth Century and the first part of the Twentieth Century that contributed to the changes in party alignment and composition that became evident in the 1930s.
Research Paper Doctorate
America and the Great War and the New Era
Brinkley, Alan. The Unfinished Nation. Vol. 2: A Concise History of the American People .4th Edition. McGraw-Hill 2004.
Essay Doctorate
Institutional change and adaptive governance arrangements
¶ … Institutions are defined as the existence of formal rules, on the one hand, and informal conventions and norms (such as impolitic societal rules that constrain behavior and impose forms of conduct) on the other.
Paper Doctorate
Organization\'s Web Site, a Checklist
¶ … organization's Web site, a checklist of criteria provided by Management Center International Limited (1) represents a useful tool. We have selected those items of the checklist that best apply to Web sites or blogs…
Research Paper Doctorate
American Elections Have Become Undemocratic and Must Be Dramatically Overhauled
American Elections Have Become Undemocratic